AI Article Synopsis

  • Whiplash injuries can lead to a lot of neck pain and high healthcare costs, and it's important to study how people recover from these injuries over a long time.
  • A study looked at 115 patients 5 years after they went through rehabilitation and found that most of them improved in areas like pain, function, and work capacity.
  • The results showed that while there were big improvements after rehab, people continued to get better slowly over time, which could be thanks to the help they received during their rehabilitation.

Article Abstract

Whiplash injury associated disorders (WAD) cause high costs for public health care. Neck pain is number 16 on the global prevalence lists for the 50 most common sequelae. It is of importance to obtain long-term data on disability and working capacity outcomes after rehabilitation. Long-term prospective data of the outcome course of whiplash are sparse. The aim of this study was to quantify improvements of pain, function/role performance, vitality, and working capacity 5 years after whiplash injury and to compare the state of health to normative values at 5 years after rehabilitation.In this naturalistic, observational, prospective cohort study, 115 patients were assessed 5 years (60 months) after a multidisciplinary rehabilitation program. The assessment set consisted of the Short Form 36 (SF-36), parts of the North American Spine Society's cervical spine assessment questionnaire (NASS) and the coping strategies questionnaire (CSQ). The effects were quantified by effect size (ES) and standardized response mean (SRM). Score differences over the course were tested by the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney U test for significance.Comparing data between entry and 60 months after rehabilitation 8 of 15 parameters improved with large ES/SRM. Outcome between 6 and 60 months showed small to moderate ES/SRM. Working capacity increased from 0 at entry to rehabilitation to 21 h/wk at 6 months and to 30 h/wk at 60 months follow-up.After large improvements in health and working capacity in the mid-term, further important improvements were observed in the long-term course. It can be hypothesized that part of those can be attributed to the interventions during inpatient rehabilitation, for example, due to better coping strategies.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5340438PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000006113DOI Listing

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