Literature DB >> 17632397

Fear avoidance beliefs influence duration of sick leave in Spanish low back pain patients.

Francisco M Kovacs1, Alfonso Muriel, María Dolores Castillo Sánchez, José María Medina, Ana Royuela.   

Abstract

STUDY
DESIGN: Follow-up study.
OBJECTIVES: To estimate the influence of fear avoidance beliefs (FAB) on 1-year low back pain (LBP)-related sick leave. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: As opposed to Anglo-Saxon and Northern European subjects, in Spanish LBP patients the influence of FAB on disability and quality of life is virtually irrelevant.
METHODS: Twelve primary care and 9 hospital services from 7 different regions of Spain recruited 165 workers who visited the National Health Service for LBP. None was excluded. On their first visit and 14 days later, patients were given 2 independent Visual Analogue Scales (VAS) for LBP and leg pain, as well as the validated Spanish versions of the Fear Avoidance Beliefs (FABQ), Roland-Morris (RMQ), and SF-12 questionnaires. During the following 12-month period, the number of days on sick leave because of LBP was registered.
RESULTS: Differences in sick leave throughout the study period were associated with baseline differences in chronicity, severity of low back (not referred) pain, disability, FAB, physical and mental quality of life, being on sick leave when entering the study, and duration of previous sick leave. Ordinal logistic regression models showed that each additional point in the total FAB baseline score increases by 2.4% the odds of being on sick leave for up to 60 days during the following year and by 7.7% the odds of being sick listed for 61 days or more. Corresponding figures for FAB-Work scores are 4.2% and 11%. No variable modifies the effect of FAB on sick leave.
CONCLUSION: Although in Spanish patients the influence of FAB on disability and quality of life is irrelevant, baseline FABQ score does influence LBP-related sick leave during the following year. This seems to be a direct effect of FAB, since there is no confounding by any other variable.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17632397     DOI: 10.1097/BRS.0b013e3180b9f5f7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Spine (Phila Pa 1976)        ISSN: 0362-2436            Impact factor:   3.468


  9 in total

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4.  Exploring pain phenotypes in workers with chronic low back pain: Application of IMMPACT recommendations.

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7.  Pain catastrophizing, kinesiophobia and fear-avoidance in non-specific work-related low-back pain as predictors of sickness absence.

Authors:  Israel Macías-Toronjo; María Jesús Rojas-Ocaña; José Luis Sánchez-Ramos; E Begoña García-Navarro
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8.  Fear-Avoidance Behavior and Sickness Absence in Patients with Work-Related Musculoskeletal Disorders.

Authors:  Israel Macías-Toronjo; José L Sánchez-Ramos; María J Rojas-Ocaña; Esperanza Begoña García-Navarro
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Review 9.  Absence from work and return to work in people with back pain: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

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  9 in total

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