Most people don't think about their mouse hand until something hurts. By then, the damage has usually been building quietly for months. RSI from mouse use is common, well-documented, and largely preventable — if you pay attention early enough.
What RSI Actually Is
Repetitive strain injury is an umbrella term for musculoskeletal problems caused by repeated motion and sustained static positions. For computer users, the usual culprits are:
- Carpal tunnel syndrome — compression of the median nerve in the wrist; numbness, tingling, weakness in the hand
- Tendinitis — inflammation in the tendons of the forearm, wrist, or shoulder
- De Quervain's tenosynovitis — pain at the base of the thumb, often from gripping and clicking
- "Mouse arm" — a catch-all for forearm and shoulder pain from sustained mouse use
What they share: gradual onset, often dismissed early as tiredness or minor soreness, and genuinely debilitating if left alone.
How Clicking Causes the Problem
One click is a tiny motion. Thousands of them per day, for months, isn't.
The issue is cumulative load. The muscles and tendons involved in clicking never get enough recovery time. The forearm stays in a static position for hours. Holding a mouse keeps muscles under low-level continuous tension the whole time.
Put the mouse too far from the body, add a desk at the wrong height, or sit in a chair without proper arm support, and you've created the conditions for injury. It doesn't take much.
Early Signs Worth Taking Seriously
Catch it early and it's usually straightforward to fix. Watch for:
- Aching or stiffness in the forearm, wrist, or hand after a long day
- Tingling or numbness in the fingers, especially the thumb and first two
- Grip weakness — struggling with jars or anything requiring a pinch
- Pain that builds through the day but eases overnight
- Tenderness along the inside of the forearm
If any of these stick around for more than a week or two, take them seriously. They don't get better on their own.
What Actually Helps
Sort the workstation first
The mouse should sit close to the body, roughly level with the elbow. The wrist shouldn't have to bend upwards to reach it. Forearm and desk surface roughly parallel.
Wrist rests help some people and create new pressure points for others. Try one and see.
Change the mouse
Vertical mice put the hand in a handshake position rather than palm-down. That significantly reduces forearm rotation, which is where a lot of mouse-related strain comes from. They feel odd for a few days. Then they feel normal.
Trackballs are a bigger adjustment but remove the sustained shoulder and forearm engagement that a traditional mouse demands. The hand barely moves at all.
Cut unnecessary clicks
A lot of clicking is genuinely avoidable. Keyboard shortcuts replace large numbers of mouse interactions in most apps. Learning the ten most useful shortcuts in your main tools takes an afternoon and saves thousands of clicks over months. That's not an exaggeration.
Automate the repetitive stuff
If you're clicking through the same sequence repeatedly — the same menus, the same dialogs, the same navigation — that's a job for software, not your hand.
Auto clicker tools handle this kind of mechanical, repetitive clicking. For presence management specifically — Slack, Teams, or Discord, where appropriate, without clicking yourself — Green Dotter handles it entirely. Your hand doesn't need to be involved in keeping an idle timer running.
Take proper microbreaks
Thirty to sixty seconds every twenty to thirty minutes beats one long break taken rarely. Stand up, shake out the hand, roll the shoulder. Brief, regular interruptions stop the sustained tension from building.
Time Out (Mac) and WorkRave (Windows) are both free and will remind you.
Stretch
Simple forearm stretches, done regularly, make a real difference:
- Arm out in front, palm down, pull fingers gently upward with the other hand — hold 15 seconds
- Same position, palm up, pull fingers down — hold 15 seconds
- Slow wrist circles both ways
Do these before work and after long sessions. Takes two minutes.
If You're Already in Pain
Rest is not optional. Working through RSI pain causes more damage, not less. Cut mouse use as much as you can — switch to keyboard shortcuts, voice dictation, or voice control for anything that doesn't strictly need clicking.
Ibuprofen helps short-term with inflammation but doesn't fix anything. Ice on the painful area helps too. Neither is a substitute for actually reducing load.
If symptoms last more than two to three weeks, see a GP or physio. Early-stage RSI responds well to treatment. Left for months, some forms need surgery.
Prevention Is Much Easier Than Treatment
Everything here is simpler before your hands start hurting. A better mouse, decent keyboard shortcuts, a break reminder, and automating the repetitive clicking — none of it takes long, and together it substantially cuts your risk.
The people who end up with serious injuries are almost always the ones who ignored early warning signs. Don't be that person.