| Literature DB >> 27647141 |
Ivan A Steenstra1,2, Claire Munhall3, Emma Irvin3, Nelson Oranye4, Steven Passmore4, Dwayne Van Eerd3, Quenby Mahood3, Sheilah Hogg-Johnson3.
Abstract
Purpose We systematically reviewed the evidence on factors that predict duration of sick leave in workers after 6 weeks low back pain (LBP) related sick leave. We hypothesized that different factors affect the duration of the leave depending on the time away from work. Methods The review occurred in seven phases: (1) developing the central question, (2) conducting the literature search, (3) identifying relevant publications, (4) quality appraisal, (5) data extraction, (6) evidence synthesis, and (7) knowledge translation. We searched for studies that reported episodes of LBP and sick leave that lasted more than 6 weeks. All included studies reported at least one prognostic factor where return to work was the outcome. Results We identified twenty-two relevant publications. The impact of pain, functional status and radiating pain seems to change with duration of work disability. Workers' recovery expectations remain important after 6 weeks. Modified duties are rarely studied in later phases of work disability. Depression/mental health did not appear to be an important factor in later phases. Workplace physical factors remain important. There is insufficient evidence that pain catastrophising and fear avoidance are predictive factors in later phases. There was moderate evidence for age in the later phases. Functional capacity and claim related factors were supported by some evidence. Discusion Physical demands in the workplace are preventing workers from getting back to work in a timely fashion across phases. The psychosocial work environment is understudied in later phases. Overall, we cannot conclude that prognostic factors change over time.Entities:
Keywords: Disability; Disability evaluation; Prognosis; Review; Sick leave; Systematic
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27647141 PMCID: PMC5591348 DOI: 10.1007/s10926-016-9666-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Occup Rehabil ISSN: 1053-0487
Fig. 1Flowchart chronicling the search process
Characteristics of included studies
| First author | Year | Country | Setting | Outcome definition | Final sample size | N factors | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sub acute phase: 6–12 weeks since first day of injury/sick leave | |||||||
| Reme (22) | 2009 | Norway | Secondary care | RTW | 175 | 12 | 19 |
| Truchon (23) | 2010 | Canada | WC | RTW | 296 | 9 | 17 |
| Gross (70) | 2004 | Canada | WC | RTW | 114 & 132 (2 cohorts) | 3 | 15 |
| Joy (24) | 2001 | USA | Secondary care | RTW | 115 | 6 | 14 |
| Truchon (25) | 2005 | Canada | WC | RTW | 321 | 4 | 14 |
| Schultz (34) | 2004 | Canada | WC | RTW | 214 | 9 | 14 |
| Chronic phase >12 weeks since first day of injury/sick leave | |||||||
| Gross (36) | 2005 | Canada | Tertiary care | Benefits | 228 & 210 (2 cohorts) | 8 | 21 |
| Gauthier (19) | 2006 | Canada | Tertiary care; | Benefits | 255 | 7 | 19 |
| Okurowski (26) | 2003 | USA | WC | Benefits | 962 | 4 | 19 |
| Gross (71) | 2005 | Canada | OHS | RTW | 45 | 4 | 18 |
| Storheim (33) | 2005 | Norway | Secondary care | Benefits | 93 | 3 | 18 |
| Anema (72) | 2004 | Multinational | OHS; WC | RTW | 1631 | 3 | 17 |
| Blackwell (20) | 2004 | USA | WC | Benefits | 227 | 9 | 17 |
| Van der Giezen (27) | 2000 | ISSA study: Netherlands | WC | RTW | 298 | 12 | 16 |
| Koopman (73) | 2004 | Netherlands | Tertiary care | RTW | 51 | 5 | 15 |
| Anema (29) | 2009 | ISSA study | WC | RTW | 2444 | 19 | 14 |
| Mayer (74) | 2001 | USA | Tertiary care | RTW | 1052 | 13 | |
| Hansson (28) | 2000 | ISSA study | Occupational health services | RTW | 2106 | 3 | 11 |
| Vendrig (21) | 1999 | Netherlands | Secondary care | RTW | 137 | 16 | 11 |
| Hazard (30) | 1991 | USA | Secondary & tertiary care | RTW | 195 (1 year), 69 (2 years) | 6 | 11 |
| Gallagher (75) | 1989 | USA | Primary care; WC | RTW | 140 | 6+ interactions | 9 |
| Gatchel (31) | 1994 | USA | Tertiary care | RTW | 152 | 1 | 8 |
WC Worker’s compensation, OHS Occupational health service, RTW Return to work, Benefits workers compensation/disability benefits
Prognostic factor evidence table
| Prognostic factor | Phase | Evidence | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Sex | Chronic | 2H, 1 M, 1L | Moderate for negative association with male sex |
| Subacute | 2H, 1 M, 1 M | Strong for no association | |
| Age | Chronic | 2H, 1H, 2 M, 2L, 1L | Moderate for negative association |
| Subacute | 1H, 1 M | Moderate for negative association | |
| Comorbidity | Chronic | 1 M | Insufficient |
| Diagnosis | Chronic | 1L | Insufficient |
| Radiating | Subacute | 1H | Moderate for no association |
| Pain Intensity | Chronic | 1H, 2 M, 2L | Moderate for negative association |
| Subacute | 2H, 1 M | Strong for no association | |
| Functional status | Chronic | 2 M, 1L | Moderate for negative association |
| Subacute | 2H, 2 M | Strong for no association | |
| Functional status-FCE | Chronic | 1H, 1 M, 2L | Moderate for positive association |
| Subacute | 2 M (2 cohorts, one publication) | Moderate for positive association | |
| Pain observation | Subacute | 1 M | Insufficient |
| Delay in referral | Chronic | 4H, 1L | Strong for negative association |
| Intervention | Chronic | 1 M, 1H | Moderate for positive association |
| Subacute | 1H, 2 M | Moderate for positive association | |
| Health | Chronic | 2 M, 1L | Moderate for positive association |
| Subacute | 1 M | Insufficient | |
| Lifestyle | Chronic | 1L | Insufficient |
|
| |||
| Expectation of RTW | Chronic | 2 M, 1L | Insufficient |
| Subacute | 1H, 1 M | Moderate for positive association | |
| Fear avoidance/Pain catastrophising/Cognitive appraisal/Coping | Chronic | 1H, 1 M,1L | Moderate evidence for negative association* |
| Subacute | 1H, 1 M | Moderate evidence for negative association* | |
| Distress | Subacute | 1H | Insufficient |
| Depression | Chronic | 1H, 1L | Moderate for no association |
| Mental Health | Chronic | 2L, 2L | Insufficient |
|
| |||
| SES | Chronic | 2H, 1 M,1L | Strong evidence for positive association |
| Subacute | 1H | Insufficient | |
| Physical demands | Chronic | 1H, 1 M | Moderate evidence for positive association |
| Subacute | 1H | Insufficient | |
| Modified duties | Chronic | 1 M | Insufficient |
| Social support | Chronic | 1H | Insufficient |
| Subacute | 1 M | Insufficient | |
| Job satisfaction | Chronic | 1 M | Insufficient |
| Attorney involvement | Chronic | 2H | Strong evidence for negative association |
| Worker’s compensation | Chronic | 2H, 1 M, 1L | Strong evidence for negative association |
H High quality, M Moderate quality, L Low quality, SES Socio economic status, *Heterogeneity in measures