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Individual work support for employed patients with low back pain

COOLE J; DRUMMOND AE; WATSON PJ
CLIN REHABIL , 2013, vol. 27, n° 1, p. 40-50
Doc n°: 161466
Localisation : Documentation IRR

D.O.I. : http://dx.doi.org/DOI:10.1177/0269215512446839
Descripteurs : CE51 - LOMBALGIE, JK - TRAVAIL ET HANDICAP

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the feasibility and effectiveness of individual work
support for employed patients with low back pain.
DESIGN: Pilot randomized
controlled trial of a 16-week vocational intervention with six-month follow-up.
SETTING: Community/outpatient. PARTICIPANTS: Fifty-one employed participants
concerned about their ability to work due to low back pain. Outcome data was
obtained for 38 participants at six-month follow-up. INTERVENTIONS: The
intervention group received up to eight individually targeted vocational sessions
in conjunction with group rehabilitation for low back pain. The control group
received group rehabilitation. OUTCOME MEASURES: The feasibility of the
intervention was assessed by the recruitment rate, drop-out and loss to follow-up
of the participants and the content and delivery of the intervention as recorded
by the researcher. The primary outcome measure was perceived work ability.
RESULTS: Seventy-three participants were referred to the study over six months.
Eighty-seven individual work support sessions were delivered. Thirty-one
participants (61% of those retained in the study) attended more than half of the
group rehabilitation sessions. The intervention was influenced by the uptake of
group rehabilitation, the willingness of the participants to involve their
workplace and of their workplace to involve the research therapist. The effect of
the intervention on work ability was equivocal.
CONCLUSIONS: Although it was
possible to recruit participants and to deliver the intervention, considerable
methodological problems were identified. However, even if these were addressed,
the impact of such interventions is likely to be limited unless there is an
integrated approach between healthcare, employers and employees. Further research
is required to evaluate work-focused interventions with this client group.

Langue : ANGLAIS

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