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Packaging and ergonomics go hand-in-hand

Ergonomic packaging can be a hands-down winner.

Pw 61586 Anthony Sterling 6

Ergonomics aims to make the design of things (i.e. work stations and products) compatible with human limitations. It's not that packaging professionals don't know that ergonomics should be applied to packaging; rather, not all know the depths and variety that the application can take. To correct that situation, packaging professions need a broad perspective, one that regards ergonomics and packaging as an organic pair and grants it front-of-the-mind awareness.

The perspective should be intuitive and no more complicated than required; these are ergonomic principles themselves. A practical way of achieving that is to associate ergonomics with what's most fundamental to a packaging professional: the functions of packaging (protection, communication, and convenience). And whereas each function has aspects that reflect the packaging/ergonomics link, this article addresses protection.

Protection of the product is a function so basic that there's little chance that a packaging professional ever would be unmindful of it; however, the chance is greater that the protection function will be viewed too narrowly. Of course, packaging should protect the product from harm but it also should protect people from the harm that the product could inflict. The latter role, a safety issue, also is a concern of ergonomics, as evidenced by the hierarchy for safe design.

The hierarchy sets three mandates, that: 1) a design be as hazard-free as feasible; 2) safeguards be employed against residual hazards (for, certain hazards are inherent to certain products); and 3) warnings be used to the extent warranted. Two of the three definitely are packaging related. Packaging is a safeguard, shielding people from harm. Packaging is a medium through which warnings are conveyed; therefore, warnings are a component not only of the protection function but also of the communication function (overlap among functions is common and unavoidable, given their interrelatedness).

Regarding protection, knowledge of the limitations, capabilities, and tendencies of the human hand is valuable, since the hand invariably comes in contact with the package. Consider C-R (child-resistant) closures—a merger of packaging and ergonomics, if ever there was one. Industry is aware of the difficulty that those closures impose on prescription-taking seniors with diminished dexterity; but for the most part, the best seniors have been offered is the option of receiving their prescriptions with conventional closures. Any children of seniors are grown, so problem solved, right? Not if one factors in the trend of seniors moving in with those grown children, and, yes, grandchildren.

On the other hand, is industry's determination of the effectiveness of C-R closures too conveniently assuming? Whatever differences there might be among the test protocols, what they share in common is the notion that if a child can't solve the C-R closure within a specified time, the closure is effective. The protocols just might be underestimating the tenacity of some children, who will stick to the task longer than the time afforded a test subject; in fact, a recent segment on a national evening news program showed that children of very tender years, given enough time, can open C-R closures.

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