IT professionals spend more time staring at screens than almost any other profession. Code reviews, terminal windows, documentation, video calls, and secondary monitors running alongside everything else. The physical toll of that kind of sustained screen work is real, and it compounds quietly across weeks and months until something becomes difficult enough to pay attention to.
Most of the fixes are not complicated. They do not require equipment, significant time, or dramatic changes to how work gets done. They require noticing what is causing discomfort and making the small adjustments that prevent it from becoming chronic.
Sort Your Prescription Glasses First
If you wear prescription glasses and cannot remember when the prescription was last updated, that is the first thing to address. An outdated prescription means your eyes are compensating for the gap between what the lenses provide and what your vision actually needs, and during extended screen work that compensation produces fatigue, headaches, and difficulty concentrating that is easy to mistake for overwork.
For IT work specifically, the focal distance matters as much as the prescription strength. Standard distance lenses are calibrated for several metres. Most development and operations work happens at 50 to 70 centimetres from the screen. A pair of prescription glasses made with that intermediate distance in mind reduces the focusing effort significantly during a long coding session compared to wearing distance glasses for close work all day.
If your prescription is current and your glasses still feel uncomfortable after extended screen use, mention the screen distance and daily hours of screen work to your optician at the next appointment. The right lens for IT work is not always the same as the right lens for driving.
Keep Dry Eye Drops at the Desk
Dry, gritty eyes by mid-afternoon are one of the most consistent complaints among developers and IT workers. The cause is simple. Concentrated screen work reduces blink rate to roughly a third of normal, and the tear film that keeps the eye surface hydrated breaks down faster than it is being replenished.
A bottle of preservative-free dry eye drops on the desk, used once or twice across the working day, restores the tear film before the discomfort becomes disruptive. Preservative-free is the format worth using if the drops are going to be applied more than four times a day, since the preservatives in standard bottled drops can themselves cause irritation with repeated daily use on already sensitised eyes.
This is one of the fastest return-on-investment changes available for in-session comfort. The drops cost very little, take three seconds to use, and the difference in how the eyes feel by late afternoon compared to not using them is consistently noticeable.
Adjust the Physical Setup
The way the screen relates to the body determines how hard the posture and visual system work during a session, and most IT setups have never been adjusted from wherever the monitor landed when the desk was first set up.
The monitor should sit at arm’s length, with the top of the screen at or slightly below eye level. This keeps the neck in a neutral position rather than extended upward or dropped forward. A screen too close forces the eye muscles to maintain a closer focal distance than necessary for hours at a time. A screen too low pulls the head down and loads the cervical spine.
For dual monitor setups, the primary screen should be centred to avoid the sustained rotation that a side-positioned primary monitor requires. Secondary monitors sitting slightly off to the side are less of an issue because the head turns to look at them rather than being held at an angle continuously.
Use the 20-20-20 Rule Without Skipping It
The 20-20-20 rule exists for exactly the kind of work IT professionals do. Every twenty minutes, look at something twenty feet away for twenty seconds. The ciliary muscles that maintain near focus fatigue under sustained load, and this brief redirection gives them a recovery window before the fatigue accumulates enough to affect concentration and cause discomfort.

The reason it rarely gets applied is that twenty minutes into a debugging session or a complex deployment is not a natural pause point. A timer set independently of work flow makes the rule reliable. The break does not require stopping work. It requires redirecting gaze briefly, which takes twenty seconds and then allows return to the same task.
Combine this with a brief stand and shoulder roll during longer breaks and the postural tension that builds across a long session reduces considerably.
Build Yoga or Stretching Into the Day
IT work concentrates physical stress in specific areas. The neck, upper back, and wrists bear the sustained load of desk work, and the forward head position that develops during concentrated screen use is particularly hard on the cervical spine and the muscles surrounding it.
Yoga is particularly effective for IT professionals not because it is inherently a technology worker’s activity, but because it specifically addresses the flexibility and strength in the areas that desk work degrades. A short morning practice focused on the neck, shoulders, thoracic spine, and hip flexors prepares the body for a day at the desk in the same way a warm-up prepares an athlete for training.
For anyone who finds a full yoga practice impractical to fit into a working day, a ten-minute neck and shoulder routine at the start of the morning and again in the early evening produces a noticeable difference in how the body feels after a long session within a few weeks of consistency.
Eat Well Enough to Sustain Concentration
Physical health and cognitive function are not separate during a demanding working day. Blood glucose stability across the afternoon determines whether concentration holds or drops, and the eating habits that cause the mid-afternoon slump are well understood even when they are not being applied.
A lunch that includes protein, complex carbohydrates, and a reasonable amount of fat sustains concentration across the afternoon better than one that is high in refined carbohydrates and low in protein. Snacks that combine protein and fibre, nuts, Greek yoghurt, vegetables with hummus, maintain blood glucose more stably than processed options that produce a spike and then a drop.
For eye health specifically, the nutritional support covered in earlier pieces in this series, lutein from leafy greens, omega-3 from oily fish, vitamins C and E, contribute to long-term eye health that directly affects how well the eyes function during screen-intensive work over years rather than days.
Get an Eye Test Annually
For IT professionals, the standard two-year eye test interval that suits most adults is worth revising to annual. The visual demands of sustained screen work accelerate the rate at which prescription changes become noticeable, and the eye health implications of the career’s screen load are worth monitoring more frequently than the average population requires.
An annual eye test also gives the optician the opportunity to check for early signs of conditions that are more common in people who spend significant time at screens, including convergence insufficiency, accommodation spasm, and dry eye disease, all of which respond well to early intervention and become harder to manage if identified late.
| Hack | What It Addresses | How Often |
| Updated prescription glasses | Visual fatigue, concentration | Check annually |
| Dry eye drops at the desk | Tear film depletion, surface discomfort | 1 to 2 times daily |
| Monitor position adjustment | Neck strain, focusing distance | Set once, review quarterly |
| 20-20-20 rule | Ciliary muscle fatigue | Every 20 minutes |
| Yoga or stretching | Neck, shoulder, back tension | Daily |
| Balanced meals and snacks | Concentration, blood glucose | Every meal |
| Annual eye test | Prescription accuracy, eye health | Annually |
The Bottom Line
IT professionals work in conditions that are harder on the visual system and the body than most office environments, and the discomfort that results is not something to push through indefinitely. The hacks here are not significant interventions. They are small, consistent adjustments that collectively change how the working day feels in a way that compounds positively over weeks rather than dramatically on day one.
Start with whatever is most obviously missing from the current setup and work through from there.
