Lebanon sits in a region where people often work across a mix of environments—healthcare, retail, service, construction-adjacent supply roles, and office work. Many jobs here involve repeated upper-limb tasks (hands/wrists/forearms) paired with time pressure.
Common Lebanon-specific patterns we see clients describe:
- High-volume customer or patient workflows where breaks get delayed during busy shifts.
- Seasonal workload surges that increase overtime or require covering coworkers.
- Commuter-heavy schedules that reduce recovery time—symptoms worsen when you return home and still have to drive, unload, and manage household duties.
- Hybrid office setups (laptops, improvised monitors, temporary workstations) that don’t match ergonomic guidance.
When repetitive motion causes symptoms like carpal tunnel, tendonitis, trigger finger, tarsal tunnel/nerve compression, or nerve pain, the key legal question is whether the job duties were a substantial factor.


