In and around Columbus, Indiana, repetitive strain claims often have a similar real-world rhythm: a job task is “routine,” but the cumulative load builds—tight deadlines, limited staffing, shorter training, and the pressure to keep production or keep up with customers.
Common Columbus-area scenarios we see include:
- Industrial and light manufacturing roles: gripping tools all shift, repeating the same arm motion, or working with equipment that isn’t ergonomically adjusted.
- Warehouse and logistics work: repeated lifting, scanning, sorting, and controlling packaging with sustained posture.
- Office and tech-adjacent jobs: long stretches of keyboard/mouse work, frequent report uploads, and fewer true microbreaks than employees assume.
- Service roles: repetitive cleaning motions, carrying supplies, and staying in the same posture while meeting time-based expectations.
When symptoms develop gradually, insurers sometimes argue the timing is “just coincidence.” Your job records, symptom notes, and medical timeline are what counter that.


