Anna H
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Abstract [en]
Background: Taking sick leave (SL) for long-term musculoskeletal pain (MSP), predominantly in the neck, shoulders and back, is common among women in Sweden. Long-term MSP affects their daily life and causes impaired work ability and long-term SL. Therefore, it is necessary to work from a multidimensional perspective to generate knowledge about factors that may obstruct or promote work ability and well-being in the return-to-work (RTW) process among women on SL for MSP. The aim of the thesis was to identify factors of importance for work ability, well-being and RTW among women on SL for long-term neck/shoulder and/or back pain.
Methods: Study I is a narrative systematic review. An extensive systematic search was performed through the databases Medline, CINAHL and PsycINFO, from their inception until February 2016. The inclusion criteria for the articles were: study population of men and women aged 18-65 years, work absence ≥ 2 weeks, and neck/shoulder or back pain. The outcome variable was RTW. An additional search through reference lists and citations of the included articles was performed in Scopus. A total of 10 studies were selected for the methodological quality assessment and synthesis of the results. Data were synthesized through analysis of the content according to similarities of factors. For Study II-IV, a postal survey was sent to 600 women in central and northern Sweden who were receiving time-loss benefits during the spring of 2016. The inclusion criteria were women aged 18-65 years, ≥ 50% SL from service, SL ≥ 1 month due to neck/shoulder and/or back pain (≥ 3 months), and understanding the Swedish language. The exclusion criteria were rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, stroke, cancer, Parkinson, bipolar disease, schizophrenia, and pregnancy. A follow-up survey was sent out in spring 2017 to the 208 women who answered the survey at baseline; 141 responded. Study II was cross-sectional; a multiple linear regression was conducted to determine the association between the factors and work ability and well-being, respectively. Study III had a prospective design with a 1-year follow-up. A multiple logistic regression was conducted to determine whether work ability and well-being predicted RTW. To assess the discriminative ability of the Work Ability Index (WAI) and Life Satisfaction questionnaire (LiSat-11) regarding women who did RTW and those who did not RTW (NRTW), Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves were used. Study IV also had a prospective design with a 1-year follow-up. Cluster analysis was performed to identify potential predictors, and a multiple logistic regression model was used to identify significant predictors of RTW.
Results: Study I suggested that recovery beliefs, health-related factors and work capacity may be important areas to target in interventions for women and men with long-term neck or back pain. The review also showed that there is a lack of high-quality studies. Study II showed that believing one would return to the same work within 6 months, pain intensity and job strain were associated with work ability among women on SL for long-term neck/shoulder and/or back pain. Self-efficacy and depression were associated with well-being. The findings from Study III indicated that work ability was important for RTW in this group of women. The WAI adequately discriminated between RTW and NRTW. The LiSat-11 did not predict RTW or discriminate between RTW and NRTW. The results from Study IV indicated that coping through increasing behavioral activities, believing one would return to the same work within 6 months, and social support outside work predicted RTW in this group of women.
Conclusions: The results from the empirical studies on women only were partly in agreement with results found in the narrative systematic review on men and women. In light of this, future studies may benefit from investigating prognostic factors for RTW among men and women separately. Factors that emerged in the empirical studies would need to be tested in a weighted model to identify whether any of them mediate or moderate the outcome variable RTW.
http://www.diva-portal.org/smash/record.jsf?fbclid=IwAR3FKACSMcqW7C1yRfdrJXZeQDzrO4Vnmn7ryTKaLag-JCH-GHDw8PqbYXc&pid=diva2:1370212&dswid=-8061
Fulltext:
http://www.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:1370212/FULLTEXT01.pdf
Press release :
"Tron på sig själv är vägen tillbaka till arbete?"
("Belief in oneself is the way back to work?")
https://expertsvar.se/pressmeddelan...gFvXotohIIFse4EOAwA743MQ4MmM6plLq8-ujCEhO0Hvg
Google translation :
"By believing in their ability to work, despite back and neck problems, women find different ways to manage their pain, says Mamunur Rashid, a researcher at Gävle University.
Across the entire western world, especially in Sweden, researchers see that women are over-represented when it comes to sick leave for neck, shoulder and back pain, but the knowledge of why some are able to return to work is limited.
Mamunur Rashid has for a long time followed over 200 women, who are on sick leave for this reason, to find out what factors favor a return to work and what factors don't.
Belief in oneself is most important
Belief in itself is the strongest factor researchers have found to predict a change in behavior and return to work.
- If I believe in being able to return to work, it also means that I develop strategies to deal with my pain and this is by far the most important thing we have found, says Mamunur Rashid.
The pain must be managed
He states that pain patients must learn how to manage their pain and that the strategies they use to deal with their problems are very important.
The researchers saw that by changing their behavior and having regular activities, patients could reduce their stress. By becoming more active, the focus was also shifted from the pain.
- If someone has good strategies for dealing with their pain, we can see that it means an immediate return to work.
Work ability and well-being are not the same thing
In the group studied, work ability and well-being were not the same. Although a person said she felt good, she could not return to work. While someone else, despite poor wellbeing, could still return to work.
The researchers were surprised that social support and well-being outside work, from family, friends or from society, played no role, or even was negative, in getting back to work.
- Too much support will increase the fear of returning to work. We also see that these patients try to avoid activities that can provide strength to deal with their situation, which affects the crucial belief in being able to return to work, ”says Mamunur Rashid.
Work-oriented rehabilitation
This is research that can be used directly at the rehabilitation center and by the medical profession, says Mamunur, and he calls for a therapy, such as cognitive behavioral therapy, that focuses on activities that increase management strategy and develops the belief of being able to return to work.
- It has to be realistic, they have to think about their job and how to handle it. They can not affect the pain, but are helped by a belief that the pain is manageable, says Mamunur Rashid.
Conclusions from the study:
- Strong belief in coming back means returning to work
- Good strategies for managing their illness means a return to work
- Work ability and well-being are not the same thing"