How to organize a dental practice to prevent back pain and work-related strain

26 February 2026 - Archivio

Musculoskeletal disorders in dentistry, a widespread issue

Clinical experience and scientific research consistently show that musculoskeletal disorders are highly prevalent among dental professionals. The neck, shoulders, and lower back are the most affected areas, often within the first few years of practice.

Yet the response is frequently limited to changing chairs, doing occasional stretching exercises, or simply “pushing through” the discomfort. These actions rarely solve the root problem. Because pain does not stem from posture alone but from what posture is forced to compensate for every single day.

A 2021 study published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, conducted in collaboration with the University of Bologna, found that nearly 85% of dental professionals reported work-related musculoskeletal disorders within the previous 12 months.

It’s not just about posture

Just as a few seconds wasted dozens of times per day turn into hours of lost productivity over a year (as discussed in our article: How to boost the ROI of your dental practice), repetitive micro-movements accumulate over time and can evolve into chronic pain.

Leaning forward to reach instruments. Twisting repeatedly to access materials. Stretching outside a neutral axis because essential tools are not within reach. Individually, these movements seem insignificant. Repeated daily for years, they become one of the primary causes of musculoskeletal strain.

In most cases, discomfort does not depend on the professional, it depends on a practice environment that was not designed around real clinical workflows.

Common examples include:

❌ Instruments and materials arranged without process logic

❌ Operatories designed for isolated use rather than team efficiency

❌ Storage systems that are not ergonomic or easily accessible

The result? The body adapts. It compensates. Until pain appears.

Clinical quality starts with the professional’s health

There is an aspect that is rarely addressed: the quality of care begins with the dentist’s physical well-being.
A fatigued clinician loses focus more easily, works under greater tension, and struggles to maintain precision and clarity throughout the day. Likewise, a team under physical stress is more exposed to errors, inefficiencies, and slowdowns.

Practice organization as a preventive strategy

Intervention often happens only after pain has already developed through therapy, forced breaks, or adjustments. True prevention begins earlier: with dental practice design and workflow organization.

Furniture is no longer merely an aesthetic element. It is a working tool that actively contributes to professional well-being.

Designing a high-performing dental practice means:

✔️ Reducing unnecessary movements

✔️ Ensuring immediate access to instruments

✔️ Supporting stable, neutral postures

✔️ Minimizing fatigue and physical stress

Prevention is not reactive. It is designed.

Dental art approach: designing to protect the professional

For us, the dentist’s health is an integral part of practice design. At Dental Art, we create work environments based on clinical ergonomics principles, engineered to reduce movement waste and safeguard long-term professional well-being.

Let’s talk

If you would like to understand how your practice organization affects your health and performance, contact us for a personalized assessment.

👉 Request a free consultation with Dental Art

We will help you identify critical areas and develop concrete, health-oriented solutions.