Shaping Better Ergonomic Fitness Practices with Demographic Profiling Insights

by Elena D. Aguila, Leny V. Salmingo, Marilyn D. Buentipo, Noricel Uchida Garcia, Paraluman L. Veloz, Vanessa B. Pablo

Published: December 18, 2025 • DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2025.91100466

Abstract

Understanding the demographic profile insights relationship with ergonomic fitness could transform workplace wellness. This research with quantitative descriptive method using survey questionnaire in a 5-point Likert scale measurement distributed to non-teaching employees of private academic institutions explored how demographic insights can shape ergonomic fitness behaviors with a view to stimulating targeted and effective strategies. Non-teaching education workers have a good cognitive ergonomic awareness through the division of mental workload and mindfulness to bolster resilience and performance. The number of moderate efforts in balancing breaks and physical activity reveals another cultural gap where strategic rest is necessary to maintain cognition. Schools are proud of their ergonomic culture, with staff embracing healthy habits and optimizing workspaces for posture. However, the moderate use of ergonomic resources and personal workplace exercises indicate missed opportunities. This presents opportunities for further refinement by enhancing awareness and support institutionally for health-focused breaks that can reduce injury, improve well-being, and increase productivity to ensure greater benefits for participants and school communities. Age and sex have a minimal impact on ergonomic fitness habits, while job classification is a strong determinant of ergonomic fitness participation. Focus on enhancing cognitive ergonomics and workplace wellbeing is necessary by offering regular training on workload management and mindfulness, supported by smart digital tools. Recognition of mental health practices and peer support networks is highly recommended. A workplace culture valuing mental rest through breaks and open conversations while promoting ergonomic fitness includes redesigning schedules for micro-breaks, physical activity, and easy access to stretch guidelines or break zones. Regular review of workload and break policies to adapt an inclusive environment that balances productivity with cognitive wellness. Approaches to ergonomics tailored to non-teaching employees enable academic workplaces to create healthier and safer environments with long-term benefits.