For many people in the Rochester Hills area, the “repetition” doesn’t stop at the job. A typical day might include:
- sustained wrist/arm movements at work (keyboards, scanners, tools, assembly tasks)
- prolonged posture during commuting (gripping the steering wheel, neck strain, limited breaks)
- frequent lifting or repetitive movement on the job plus overtime or staffing gaps
That combination can make symptoms hard to pinpoint. Defense teams may argue the cause is non-work-related because you drive, use a phone, or perform household tasks. Your claim needs a tighter narrative—one that connects symptom onset and medical findings to the specific demands you faced during the relevant work period.


