Literature DB >> 23821309

Fatigue as prognostic risk marker of mental sickness absence in white collar employees.

C A M Roelen1, M W Heymans, W van Rhenen, J W Groothoff, J W R Twisk, U Bültmann.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To investigate fatigue as prognostic risk marker for identifying working employees at risk of long-term sickness absence (SA).
METHODS: At baseline, fatigue was measured in 633 white collar employees with the checklist individual strength (CIS) including scales for fatigue severity, reduced concentration, reduced motivation, and reduced physical activity. SA was medically certified by an occupational physician in the 3rd or 4th SA week with diagnostic codes according to the 10th version of the International Classification of Diseases. Medically certified SA was retrieved at the individual level from an occupational health register after 1-year follow-up. CIS scores were investigated as prognostic risk markers predicting medically certified SA and particularly SA certified as mental SA.
RESULTS: 614 employees (N = 378 men and N = 236 women) had complete data and were eligible for analysis; 63 (10 %) had medically certified SA of whom 39 (6 %) had mental SA. Fatigue severity and total CIS scores were associated with medically certified SA in men, but poorly discriminated between men with and without medically certified SA. Fatigue severity, reduced concentration, reduced motivation, and total CIS scores were also associated with mental SA in men. CIS and its reduced concentration scale were valid prognostic risk markers of mental SA. CONCLUSION Fatigue was a prognostic risk marker of mental SA in white collar men. The CIS should be further validated as a screening tool for the risk of mental SA in white collar working populations.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 23821309     DOI: 10.1007/s10926-013-9458-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Occup Rehabil        ISSN: 1053-0487


  63 in total

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2.  Prolonged fatigue is associated with sickness absence in men but not in women: prospective study with 1-year follow-up of white-collar employees.

Authors:  Corné A M Roelen; Willem van Rhenen; Johan W Groothoff; Jac J L van der Klink; Ute Bültmann
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4.  Long-term sickness absence and disability pension with psychiatric diagnoses: a population-based cohort study.

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8.  Sickness absence as a predictor of mortality among male and female employees.

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9.  Lost working years due to mental disorders: an analysis of the Norwegian disability pension registry.

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10.  The effectiveness of two occupational health intervention programmes in reducing sickness absence among employees at risk. Two randomised controlled trials.

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  2 in total

1.  Mental health symptoms identify workers at risk of long-term sickness absence due to mental disorders: prospective cohort study with 2-year follow-up.

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Review 2.  Determinants of Sickness Absence and Return to Work Among Employees with Common Mental Disorders: A Scoping Review.

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