First return to work following injury: does it reflect a composite or a homogeneous outcome?

Occup Environ Med

Monash University, Accident Research Centre, Building 70, Clayton, Victoria 3800, Australia.

Published: November 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to determine if returning to work (RTW) after acute orthopaedic trauma is a composite outcome, meaning it includes different types of return (full duties vs. modified work).
  • A cohort of 168 participants was followed for 6 months, with 89% completing follow-up; results showed varying factors influence the type of RTW, suggesting it's not a one-size-fits-all outcome.
  • The conclusion indicates that different modes of RTW should be treated independently for better understanding and implications in both research and insurance practices.

Article Abstract

Objective: To test whether return to work as a binary (yes/no) outcome that includes all persons who returned to work regardless of mode of return reflects a composite or a homogeneous outcome in a cohort of workers who have sustained acute orthopaedic trauma resulting in hospitalisation.

Methods: Prospective cohort study. One hundred and sixty-eight participants were recruited and followed for 6 months. The study achieved 89% follow-up. Baseline data were obtained at study recruitment and participants were further surveyed by phone at three timepoints during the study. Polytomous logistic regression was used to simultaneously examine the association between potential predictors and different modes of first return to work (RTW). A test of the equality of the ORs associated with the independent predictor variables was also undertaken.

Results: Of the 152 participants with full follow-up, 46 (30%) returned first to full duties, 58 (38%) returned first to modified work and 48 (32%) did not return to work during the study period. Significant determinants of the two modes of return to work were different. A test of the equality of ORs indicated that the relative ORs for the difference in the slope coefficients for five of the 10 independent factors in the two polytomous logistic regression sub-models corresponding to each mode of return to work were statistically significant. This raises the likelihood that first RTW reflects a composite rather than a homogeneous outcome.

Conclusion: The study provides evidence that RTW may reflect a composite outcome when it includes different modes of first RTW. The identified predictive factors appear to exert different mechanisms of action depending on the mode of RTW. The findings suggest that the different modes of RTW may need to be considered independently. The results of the study have potentially important implications for research and insurance practice.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/oem.2009.051797DOI Listing

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