Publications by authors named "Charlotte D N Rasmussen"

Article Synopsis
  • The study examined how physical work demands influence the effectiveness of the selfBACK app, aimed at managing low-back pain, with participants categorized into low and high physical demand groups.
  • Results showed that, after three months, high-demand workers using selfBACK experienced significant reductions in pain intensity, and by nine months, improvements were also noted in pain-related disability and self-efficacy, compared to usual care.
  • Despite different physical demands, both low and high physical demand workers benefited similarly from the selfBACK intervention, suggesting it is effective for managing low-back pain regardless of physical work intensity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study assessed a health literacy intervention for nursing home employees focusing on pain management and communication.
  • The intervention included training for employees and management as well as structured dialogues between staff and supervisors.
  • Results showed improvement in one key area of organizational health literacy and positive trends in other aspects related to pain management information and supervisor support.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: Both high and low levels of occupational physical activity are associated with back pain. Thus, there might be a "sweet- and sour-spot" of occupational physical activity for back pain. Our aim was to investigate if there exists an occupational physical activity "sweet- (lowest risk) and sour-spot" (highest risk) for back pain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Low back pain (LBP) is one of the most common reasons for disability globally. Digital interventions are a promising means of supporting people to self-manage LBP, but implementation of digital interventions has been suboptimal. An artificial intelligence-driven app, selfBACK, was developed to support self-management of LBP as an adjunct to usual care.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Accurate and simple measures for classifying nursing home residents according to their care needs would be valuable for planning eldercare work. Our aim was to validate a developed classification scale of residents' need for physical assistance. Eldercare workers and managers in 20 Danish nursing homes classified 1456 residents into four categories (from light to complete need for physical assistance).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Workers often bend forward at their jobs, which can lead to missing work due to sickness.
  • The study used special devices to measure how much workers bent forward while they worked and looked at how this relates to long-term sickness absence.
  • The results showed that even a little more bending can increase the risk of being absent from work for a long time, helping to improve safety measures at workplaces.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Managers' knowledge and behaviors in addressing musculoskeletal pain and sickness absence is not well understood. We investigated the association between managers' knowledge and behaviours in relation to employees' pain and their future risk of musculoskeletal pain and associated sickness absence.

Methods: The prospective study included 535 eldercare employees, and 42 managers from 20 nursing homes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We evaluated the influence of organization, eldercare worker and care situation on the use of assistive devices during resident handling in eldercare work. We conducted a multi-level study among 20 nursing homes, 126 wards within the nursing homes, 549 eldercare workers within the wards, who performed a total of 1306 care episodes including 3695 resident handlings. The influence of organization (i.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Importance: Lower back pain (LBP) is a prevalent and challenging condition in primary care. The effectiveness of an individually tailored self-management support tool delivered via a smartphone app has not been rigorously tested.

Objective: To investigate the effectiveness of selfBACK, an evidence-based, individually tailored self-management support system delivered through an app as an adjunct to usual care for adults with LBP-related disability.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Practice guidelines can facilitate the translation of evidence-based knowledge into better occupational health and safety (OHS) prevention. This paper describes the development process, findings and content of a practice and evidence-based guideline for musculoskeletal pain (MSP) to OHS professionals in Denmark. We used a participatory process with involvement of more than 100 OHS professionals in the development of the guideline.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • This study assessed a digital checklist aimed at enhancing work environment initiatives in Denmark's eldercare sector, utilizing the RE-AIM framework to measure its impact.
  • The checklist was widely disseminated through a national campaign, reaching nearly all municipalities, but only a small percentage of individual workers and eldercare workplaces fully adopted it after one year.
  • While users of the checklist showed better prioritization of work environment issues, the study suggests that ongoing efforts are necessary to ensure its sustained use and maintenance in the future.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: Low back pain (LBP) is a leading contributor to disability globally. Self-management is a core component of LBP management. We aimed to synthesise published qualitative literature concerning digital health interventions (DHIs) to support LBP self-management to: (1) determine engagement strategies, (2) identify barriers and facilitators affecting patient uptake/utilisation and (3) develop a preliminary conceptual model of barriers and facilitators to uptake/utilisation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Implementation and process evaluation is vital for understanding how interventions function in different settings, including if and why interventions have different effects or do not work at all.

Objective: This paper presents the protocol for an implementation and process evaluation embedded in a multicenter randomized controlled trial conducted in Denmark and Norway (the selfBACK project). selfBACK is a data-driven decision support system that provides participants with weekly self-management plans for low back pain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The 'physical activity paradox' advocates that leisure physical activity (PA) promotes health while high occupational PA impairs health. However, this paradox can be explained by methodological limitations of the previous studies-self-reported PA measures, insufficient adjustment for socioeconomic confounding or not addressing the compositional nature of PA. Therefore, this study investigated if we still observe the PA paradox in relation to long-term sick absence (LTSA) after adjusting for the abovementioned limitations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A digital checklist was created for the eldercare sector in Denmark to track the implementation of changes in workplace environments, focusing on its deployment in nursing homes and home care.
  • The study will assess the dissemination of this checklist through a combination of quantitative data, surveys, and monitoring campaign activities, following the RE-AIM framework which looks at reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, and maintenance.
  • Started in 2018, this evaluation aims to determine the checklist's utility and impact in improving work environments, with results expected in 2020, marking a significant contribution to research on implementation in this sector.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Despite extensive efforts, issues like obesity and poor physical capacity remain challenges for a healthy work life in several occupations. The Goldilocks work principle offers a new approach, encouraging design of productive work to promote physical capacity and health. This paper presents the protocol for the Goldilocks-childcare study, a randomised controlled intervention trial aiming to evaluate the effectiveness of implementing the Goldilocks work principle in childcare.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A study examined a 20-week participatory ergonomics program aimed at reducing physical exertion and musculoskeletal pain (MSP) among 190 childcare workers.
  • It found no significant changes in physical exertion or pain levels, but the program did lead to a notable decrease in MSP-related sickness absence.
  • While participants reported some positive experiences, self-efficacy decreased, suggesting mixed outcomes in employee confidence despite overall feasibility of the program.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Low back pain (LBP) is prevalent across all social classes, in all age groups, and across industrialized and developing countries. From a global perspective, LBP is considered the leading cause of disability and negatively impacts everyday life and well-being. Self-management is a recommended first-line treatment, and mobile apps are a promising platform to support self-management of conditions like LBP.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Various physical work demands are shown to be associated with sickness absence. However, these studies have: (a) predominantly used self-reported data on physical work demands that have been shown to be inaccurate compared with technical measurements, (b) principally focused on various physical work demands in 'isolation', i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The document discusses the development of 'GLA:D Back', a group education and exercise program designed to help individuals with persistent back pain by translating clinical guidelines into practice.
  • The program emphasizes educating patients on pain mechanisms, coping strategies, and the importance of staying active, alongside a structured exercise regimen to improve mobility.
  • Developed through an iterative process with input from experts and initial testing on patients, the program aims to foster self-management in those experiencing recurrent back pain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: A multifaceted workplace intervention consisting of participatory ergonomics, physical training, and cognitive-behavioural training (CBT) has shown effectiveness for reducing low back pain (LBP). However, the mechanisms of action underlying these intervention components are not well understood.

Methods: This was a mediation analysis of a cluster-randomised controlled trial of a multifaceted intervention in 420 workers in elderly care.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The prevalence of musculoskeletal pain (MSP) is persistently high throughout the world. Work-related factors such as high physical workload (lifting, bending and twisting of the back) are considered to be among the main causes of MSP. Work in childcare includes the need to lift, carry, and support children in a range of activities, requiring several demanding postures and movements, such as bending forward and twisting of the back and sitting on the floor.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: It is challenging to interpret the results of multifaceted interventions due to complex program theories that are difficult to measure in a quantifiable manner. The aims of this paper were, first, to develop a model for a comprehensive quantitative implementation evaluation and, second, to operationalize it in the process evaluation of the stepped-wedge cluster randomized controlled trial: "Prevention of low back pain and its consequences among nurses' aides in elderly care" to investigate if implementation differed across intervention components, steps, and settings (workplaces).

Methods: Operationalization of a quantifiable measure of implementation requires three steps: (1) development of a program logic and intervention protocol, (2) description of a complete and acceptable delivery of the intervention, and (3) description of what determines the receipt of the intervention.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In a recent study, we involved all relevant stakeholders to identify practice-based implementation components for successful implementation and sustainability in work environment interventions. To understand possible knowledge gaps between evidence and practice, the aim of this paper is to investigate if effectiveness studies of the 11 practice-based implementation components can be identified in existing scientific literature. PubMed/MEDLINE, PsycINFO, and Web of Science were searched for relevant studies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Our aim was to identify implementation components for sustainable working environment interventions in the nursing assistant sector to generate a framework to optimize the implementation of workplace improvement initiatives. The implementation framework was informed by: 1) an industry advisory group, 2) interviews with key stakeholder, 3) concept mapping workshops, and 4) an e-mail survey. Thirty five stakeholders were interviewed and contributed in the concept mapping workshops.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF