Yes - 25%
No - 75%
Articles about this company:
Assists RSI recovery (1st November 2011)
Having worked with a keyboard for fifty years, Bill Bordass started to develop symptoms of RSI with conventional keyboards becoming increasingly uncomfortable to use.
From Safety first
Key to recovery (1st October 2011)
Having worked with a keyboard for fifty years, Bill Bordass started to develop symptoms of RSI with conventional keyboards becoming "increasingly uncomfortable" to use.
From Managing safety
Keyboard aids RSI recovery (1st September 2011)
Finger friendly (1st September 2011)
Stafford-based P C D Maltron has announced a major order from Turkey for 350 of its special-needs keyboards comprising 70 sets of five different keyboards.
Finger-friendly keyboard (1st August 2011)
PCD Maltron has introduced its Finger-Friendly keyboard that incorporates many features from the Maltron portfolio.
Keyboard friendly (1st June 2011)
PCD Maltron is highlighting its Finger-Friendly keyboard as well as single-hand keyboards, head/mouth-stick/single-finger keyboards and the anti-RSI doyen of keyboards at the Safety & Health Expo 2011.
From Training
Pain free hands (1st April 2011)
Switching from using a QUERTY keyboard to a Maltron keyboard and key layout means Betty Hedrick's hands are now free from pain.
Finger friendly (1st April 2011)
The latest addition to the Maltron range of specialist keyboards is the flat Finger Friendly that incorporates many features from the Maltron portfolio including the prevention against keyboardinduced RSI.
Quick transition to Maltron keyboard (1st February 2011)
Louise Kibbey has used a Maltron keyboard since 1996 when she developed Tendonitis in both hands due to lifting something incorrectly.
Fully ergonomic trackball keyboard (1st November 2010)
Sarah Wald was having major problems as a result of using a conventional flat keyboard to access her computer system and was recognised as suffering from RSI. She then transferred to a Maltron fully ergonomic keyboard a
Finger friendly & online (1st October 2010)
Maltron ergonomically-designed keyboards are now available through a new website, www.maltronsales.
RSI solution residing under the stairs! (1st October 2010)
With the current trend for computers and computer peripherals, including keyboards, to become obsolete in a few years, Maltron has bucked the trend with a user report that one of its anti-RSI keyboards is in full workin
Get finger friendly (1st September 2010)
Maltron ergonomic keyboards are a means of preventing keyboardinduced RSI and enabling those stricken by this crippling condition to return to full-time work. The latest addition to the Maltron range is the flat Finger
From Ppe
Finger friendly keyboard (1st May 2010)
Ergonomic keyboards from Maltron are designed to prevent keyboardinduced RSI and enable those stricken by the crippling condition to return to full-time work. The latest addition to the Maltron range of specialist keybo
Access to work (1st March 2010)
Through a system of grants, the disability programme, Access to Work, delivered by Jobcentre Plus, provides advice and support to disabled people and their employers to help them meet their obligations under the Disabil
Ergonomic keyboard (30th July 2009)
Twenty years ago Anna Chess was a skilled keyboard user but started to experience the signs and symptoms of RSI - throbbing pains in fingers, forearms, shoulders and neck even at rest. She thought she would never use a keyboard again.
Keyboard to minimise stress (1st May 2009)
Jessica Abrahams works in admin at Lancaster University using a Maltron ergonomically designed keyboard and uses another at her home. She explains why.
Ergonomic keyboard (1st June 2008)
Maltron reports increased interest in its fully-ergonomic keyboards with an order for 17 two-handed keyboards from a company in the USA and one from Eddy Pronk, a software developer in Australia who had the early sign
Brings you right up to speed (1st April 2008)
Lisa Ferguson, an office manager who was diagnosed with arthritis and then found that she had nerve damage in her fingers, now finds that her fingers respond at speed to her Maltron keyboard.
Ergonomic keyboard helps to banish pain (1st February 2008)
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, Tendonitis, Tenosynovitis and a frozen shoulder – all believed to be caused by working long hours on a conventional keyboard – were four prime reasons why Beverley Fewings could no longer work
Service team solves layout problem (1st October 2007)
Ergonomic keyboards from PCD Matron are in demand far and near. John Moremon, for example, bought a keyboard with a UK layout in the UK, but decided he needed a US layout for work in Australia.
Helping banish pain (1st October 2007)
Web developer Will James, working for Music Sales in London was worried that he might have to consider a change of career when, four years ago, he started to suffer from RSI. He experienced pins and needles in his
Ergonomic keyboards will feature at show (1st April 2007)
Stephen Hobday was already an established inventor when, with Lillian Malt, he started to experiment with his first fully ergonomic keyboard. Shaped to fit hands to avoid strain problems, it offered a new letter layout to re
Keyboard-induced pain banished (16th October 2006)
After 30 years of typewriter and keyboard use, Bill Bordass thought he would have to give up work due to pain in his hands. Luckily, he bought an ergomic keyboard from Maltron. Twelve years on, Bill's still at it...
From Newsletter Stories
Keyboard helps banish pain (1st August 2006)
PCD Maltron says that converting to a fully ergonomic Maltron keyboard has enabled more than 2000 people to return to work after musculoskeletal disorders threatened to end their careers.
From Premises
It's plug-and-play for new keyboard (1st April 2006)
The latest ergonomic keyboard from Maltron offers a range of new key layouts and a native USB controller that operates with both Windows PCs and Apple Macs.
Ergonomic keyboard (1st February 2006)
The latest ergonomic keyboard from Maltron offers a range of key layouts and a USB controller that operates with both Windows PCs and Apple Macs.
Pain-free solution (1st October 2005)
The strong arm of the law became the sore elbow of the law for Vanessa Allen who works for the Devon and Cornwall Constabulary in Exeter when she was diagnosed with severe tennis elbow.
Pain-free weekends (1st June 2005)
An RSI sufferer has seen his symptoms diminish dramatically since switching to a fully ergonomic keyboard from PCD Maltron.
Relief for RSI sufferers (1st February 2005)
Check out www.buyersguide.co.uk/profiles /w/workwise/assessments.htm for a list of court judgements in England and Wales with regards to WRULD claims and you could well be surprised by the preponderance of claims associated with keyboard use. With de
From News
RSI pain banished (1st December 2004)
After experiencing RSI problems in her hands in addition to tennis elbow, Myriam Boyden bought a fully ergonomic keyboard from PCD Maltron.
LATEST KEYBOARD FOR SINGLE HANDED USE (1st December 2004)
Available from PCD Maltron is a single handed keyboard that has been tailored for use with an Apple computer.
LATEST KEYBOARD HAS COMFORT ZONE (1st October 2004)
Although more than 1000 keyboard operators have successfully used a standard Maltron two-handed ergonomic keyboard to recover from the effects of keyboard-induced pain, there have been a handful of people who have found the design to be user unfriend
Key to pain removal (1st October 2004)
When Moira McGilvray, a secretary with Historic Scotland, suffered keyboard-induced pain (RSI) four years ago, she was diagnosed with carpal tunnel syndrome and told to take time off work.
Relieving RSI pain (1st April 2004)
Maltrons fully ergonomic keyboard is designed to reduce the pain of RSI and has received many user endorsements.
CHANGE OF KEYBOARD REMOVED RSI PAIN (1st February 2004)
PCD Maltron claims it makes sound economic sense for human