Employer Ergonomic Responsibilities in Victoria — What Melbourne Businesses Must Do
Many Melbourne organisations assume workplace ergonomics is optional — something to consider only after injuries occur.
However, under Victorian workplace safety legislation, employers have a duty to identify and manage foreseeable risks, including musculoskeletal strain from office work.
This applies whether employees work in the office, at home, or in a hybrid arrangement.
Corporate Work Health Australia supports Melbourne businesses in meeting their ergonomic risk management obligations.
Speak with our Melbourne ergonomics team:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/contact/
Why Ergonomics Is a Workplace Safety Issue
Modern office work exposes employees to low-force but long-duration physical load.
Over time this can lead to:
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neck pain
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back pain
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headaches
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repetitive strain injuries
Because these develop gradually, they are classified as preventable workplace risks rather than unavoidable injuries.
Learn about workplace ergonomics:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/workplace-ergonomics-australia/
Employer Duty of Care
Employers must eliminate or reduce risks so far as reasonably practicable.
For office environments, this includes managing exposure created by:
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prolonged sitting
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repetitive computer work
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poorly configured workstations
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inadequate work variation
Providing a chair alone does not meet this obligation.
What “Reasonably Practicable” Means in Offices
A business is expected to take steps that are:
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suitable for the risk
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available
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proportionate to potential harm
For office environments, typical measures include:
Providing Ergonomic Guidance
Employees need to understand how to set up their workstation.
Ergonomic training programs:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/training/ergonomics/
Assessing Higher-Risk Workers
Workers reporting discomfort require further review.
Workstation ergonomic assessments:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/services/ergonomic-workstation-assessment/
Supporting Remote Workers
Hybrid work still requires risk management.
Remote workstation guidance:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/signs-your-workstation-is-causing-pain/
When Employers Are Most at Risk
Organisations are more exposed when:
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multiple staff report discomfort
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issues are repeatedly raised
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adjustments are delayed
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no prevention strategy exists
Early action demonstrates proactive risk management.
How ergonomics prevents injuries:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/how-ergonomics-reduces-workplace-injuries/
Practical Approach for Melbourne Businesses
A practical ergonomic compliance strategy includes:
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Education for all staff
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Identification of higher-risk individuals
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Targeted individual assessments
Training vs assessments explained:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/ergonomic-training-vs-individual-workstation-assessments/
Benefits Beyond Compliance
Organisations implementing structured ergonomics typically see:
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fewer injury complaints
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improved productivity
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reduced absenteeism
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improved employee satisfaction
Melbourne Ergonomic Support
Corporate Work Health Australia assists with:
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workplace ergonomic programs
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staff training
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individual assessments
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hybrid workforce support
Contact our Melbourne team:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/contact/
Conclusion
Ergonomics is not just comfort — it is part of workplace risk management.
Melbourne organisations that proactively manage ergonomic risks not only meet obligations but create safer and more productive workplaces.