A practical buyer's guide to ergonomic equipment and assistive technology for inclusive workplaces, covering standing desks, screen readers, speech-to-text, alternative input devices, hearing systems, and more with price ranges and recommendations.
Ergonomic and Assistive Technology Accommodations: A Buyer's Guide
Introduction
Selecting the right ergonomic equipment and assistive technology is critical to effective workplace accommodations. The wrong choice wastes money and fails the employee; the right choice removes barriers permanently. This guide provides practical, product-specific guidance organized by category, including price ranges, key features to evaluate, and implementation tips.
All prices are approximate and reflect 2024-2025 market pricing for the US, UK, Canada, and Australia. Prices may vary by region and vendor.
Ergonomic Furniture
Standing Desks and Sit-Stand Converters
Standing desks address fatigue, back pain, circulation issues, and the need for movement throughout the day.
Key features to evaluate: Weight capacity, height range (ensure it accommodates wheelchair users at lowest setting), stability at full height, noise level, programmable memory presets, width of work surface.
Ergonomic Chairs
Task chairs for extended sitting:
Budget: HON Ignition 2.0 ($350-$450) โ adjustable arms, lumbar, seat depth; good all-rounder
Mid-range: Steelcase Series 1 ($450-$650) โ LiveBack technology adapts to spine movement
Premium: Herman Miller Aeron ($1,200-$1,500) โ PostureFit SL, three sizes, 12-year warranty; the industry standard for long-duration seating
Saddle stools: Salli Swing ($500-$800) โ for workstations requiring elevated seating
Active sitting: CoreChair ($700-$900) โ promotes micro-movements, strengthens core
Key features to evaluate: Adjustable seat height and depth, lumbar support (adjustable vs. fixed), armrest adjustability (height, width, pivot, depth), breathable material, weight capacity (standard chairs typically support 250 lbs; heavy-duty options go to 400-500 lbs).
Screen Readers and Magnification
Screen Readers
Screen readers convert on-screen text, interface elements, and document content into synthesized speech or braille output.
Strengths: Most widely used commercial screen reader; deepest support for enterprise applications (SAP, Oracle, MS Office); extensive scripting for custom applications; professional support
Considerations: Annual Software Maintenance Agreement ($340/year) required for updates
NVDA (NonVisual Desktop Access):
Price: Free and open source (donations encouraged)
Platform: Windows only
Strengths: Excellent WCAG support, active community development, regular updates, lightweight
Considerations: Less extensive support for legacy enterprise applications than JAWS; limited commercial support (though NV Access offers paid add-ons)
VoiceOver:
Price: Free (built into macOS and iOS)
Platform: Apple only
Strengths: Seamless Apple ecosystem integration, excellent mobile accessibility, no additional cost
Considerations: Not suitable for Windows environments; less granular customization than JAWS
Orca:
Price: Free (built into GNOME desktop on Linux)
Platform: Linux only
Strengths: Free, integrates with GNOME applications, supports braille displays
Considerations: Limited to Linux environments; smaller user community
Recommendation: For enterprise Windows environments, trial NVDA first (it is free). If the employee's specific applications require deeper compatibility, invest in JAWS. For Apple environments, VoiceOver is excellent and free.
Screen Magnification
ZoomText:
Price: $500 (Magnifier) / $700 (Magnifier/Reader with speech)
Up to 60x magnification with smooth scrolling, color enhancement, cursor enhancement, focus tracking, and optional text-to-speech
The most feature-rich commercial option
Built-in OS magnification:
Windows Magnifier: Free, supports up to 1600% magnification, lens/docked/full-screen modes
Hearing loops transmit audio directly to hearing aids and cochlear implants with telecoil (T-coil) receivers, providing clear speech without background noise.
Personal/desk loops:
Contacta IL-PL20 ($150-$300) โ portable pad placed under workspace; for 1:1 conversations
Williams Sound PLA ($200-$350) โ desk-mounted loop for customer-facing roles
Room loops (conference rooms, meeting spaces):
Small room (up to 200 sq ft): $1,000-$2,000 installed
Medium room (200-500 sq ft): $2,000-$4,000 installed
Large room (500+ sq ft): $4,000-$8,000 installed
Installation is typically non-disruptive (wire runs under carpet or above ceiling tiles)
Portable loops:
Williams Sound PFM PRO ($600-$900) โ portable FM system for roaming use