| Literature DB >> 32337065 |
Robert Froud1,2, Mary Grant1, Kim Burton3, Jonathan Foss1, David R Ellard1, Kate Seers4, Deb Smith5, Mariana Barillec6, Shilpa Patel1, Kirstie Haywood1, Martin Underwood1,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Working in good jobs is associated with good health. High unemployment rates are reported in those disabled with musculoskeletal pain. Supported employment interventions work well for helping people with mental health difficulties to gain and retain employment. With adaptation, these may be useful for people with chronic pain. We aimed to develop and explore the feasibility of delivering such an adapted intervention.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic pain; Feasibility; IPS; Supported employment; Work placements
Year: 2020 PMID: 32337065 PMCID: PMC7175501 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-020-00581-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Outcome measures, scale details and data collected by time-point
| Outcome measure | Scale details | Measurement time-points |
|---|---|---|
| Demographic data on gender, marital status, ethnicity, locations of chronic pain using pain drawing, duration of chronic pain symptoms, concomitant health symptoms, highest level of education, length of time out of work, and length of time looking for work | Categorical/quasi-continuous | Baseline |
| EQ-5D-5L [ | 0 to 1, where higher scores indicate greater health | Baseline, six-weeks, 14-weeks, six-months |
| Hospital and Anxiety Depression Scale (HADS )[ | 0 to 21 on each scale, where higher scores indicate greater anxiety or depression | Baseline, six-weeks, 14-weeks, six-months |
| Confidence in working | 11-point numerical rating scale (NRS), where higher scores indicate greater confidence | Baseline, six- weeks, 14-weeks, six-months |
| Work ability [ | 11-point NRS, where higher scores indicate greater perceived work ability | Baseline, six-weeks, 14-weeks, six-months |
| Current pain intensity [ | 11-point NRS, where higher scores indicate greater pain intensity | Baseline, six-weeks, 14-weeks, six-months |
| Pain intensity over past week [ | 11-point NRS, where higher scores indicate greater pain intensity | Baseline, six-weeks, 14-weeks, six-months |
| The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (WEMWBS) [ | 14 to 70, where higher scores indicate greater well-being | Baseline, six-weeks, 14-weeks, six-months |
| PROMIS short-form questionnaire for fatigue (8a) [ | 8 to 40, where higher scores indicate greater fatigue | Baseline, six-weeks, 14-weeks, six-months |
| PROMIS short-form questionnaires for pain interference (8a) [ | 6 to 30, where higher scores indicate greater pain interference | Baseline, six-weeks, 14-weeks, six-months |
| Satisfaction with placement | A 5-item scale from ‘very dissatisfied’ to ‘very satisfied’ | Six-weeks (and 14-weeks/six-months if job offer accepted) |
| Work Role Functioning Questionnaire (WRFQ) [ | 0 to 100, where higher scores indicate better work functioning | Six-weeks (and 14-weeks/six-months if job offer accepted) |
| Psychosocial Aspects of Work (PAW) [ | Job satisfaction, 7 to 35; social support, 4 to 20; mental stress, 4 to 20; where higher scores indicate greater domain perceptions | Six-weeks (and 14-weeks/six-months if job offer accepted) |
| RTW Self-Efficacy Scale [ | 2 to 10, where higher scores indicate greater self-efficacy | Six-weeks (and 14-weeks/six-months if job offer accepted) |
| Pain interference | A 5-item scale from ‘not at all’ to ‘extremely’ | Six-weeks (and 14-weeks/six-months if job offer accepted) |
| Whether work makes pain worse | A 5-item scale from ‘not at all’ to ‘extremely’ | Six-weeks (and 14-weeks/six-months if job offer accepted) |
| Job offers | Number of job offers (from any source) | 14-weeks and six-months |
| Details of accepted job offers | Number of job offers accepted, job title of accepted offer, start date, and work pattern | 14-weeks and six-months |
| Adverse events, serious adverse events | Case report details | Point of occurrence |
| Healthcare referrals | Case report details | Point of occurrence |
Fig. 1Consort diagram. The diagram shows the flow of participants through the study
Fig. 2Recruitment, work preparation, and placement completion. The figure shows recruitment, rates of work preparation, and work placement completion by time
Baseline sample characteristics (n=31)
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
| Gender, | 18 (58) |
| Age, mean (SD) | 50.9 (10.5) |
| Marital status, | |
| Single (never married) | 16 (52) |
| Married | 9 (29) |
| Separated or divorced | 6 (19) |
| Areas of pain, | |
| Lower back | 20 (65) |
| Back or neck | 23 (74) |
| Head | 6 (19) |
| Chest | 1 (3) |
| Abdominal | 1 (3) |
| Peripheral | 7 (23) |
| Ethnicity, | |
| White | 20 (65) |
| Black | 2 (6) |
| Asian | 4 (13) |
| Mixed | 5 (16) |
| Highest education, | |
| Degree/higher degree | 5 (16) |
| Higher education, A-level/equivalent | 8 (26) |
| GCSE/O-level/equivalent | 13 (42) |
| Vocational/work-related | 4 (13) |
| No qualification | 1 (3) |
| Years in pain, median (IQR) | 11.8 (2.5 to 18.0) |
| Years out of work, median (IQR) | 6.3 (0.5 to 8.0) |
| Years looking for work, median (IQR) | 4.4 (0.3 to 3.0) |
| Perceived work confidence, mean (SD) | 6.2 (2.4) |
| Perceived work ability, mean (SD) | 5.5 (2.4) |
| EQ-5D health today, mean (SD) | 53.9 (19.6) |
| EQ-5D 5L mapped to 3L value set, mean (SD) | 0.53 (0.22) |
| HADS anxiety, mean (SD) | 8.4 (4.4) |
| HADS depression, mean (SD) | 6.8 (3.2) |
| NRS current pain, mean (SD) | 5.9 (2.3) |
| NRS pain over past week, mean (SD) | 6.4 (2.4) |
| WEMWBS, mean (SD) | 23.7 (5.7) |
| PROMIS SF, fatigue; mean (SD) | 27.9 (8.2) |
| PROMIS SF, pain interference; mean (SD) | 28.5 (8.3) |
Follow-up time-points. Crude score changes from baseline (follow-up, start date)
| six-weeks (95% CI) | 14-weeks (95% CI) | six-months* (95% CI) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perceived work confidence | − 0.4 (− 2.9 to 2.0) | 7 | − 1.1 (− 4.0 to 1.8) | 10 | − 3.0 (− 6.2 to 0.2) | 9 |
| Perceived work ability | 0.4 (− 2.3 to 3.1) | 7 | − 0.1 (− 2.3 to 2.5) | 10 | − 0.8 (− 3.7 to 2.1) | 9 |
| EQ-5D health today | 4.8 (− 10.6 to 20.1) | 8 | − 0.2 (− 13.5 to 13.1) | 10 | − 6.9 (− 24.8 to 11.8) | 9 |
| EQ-5D 5L ➔ 3L† | − 0.06 (− 0.19 to 0.07) | 8 | − 0.08 (− 0.24 to 0.08) | 10 | − 0.06 (− 0.26 to 0.15) | 9 |
| HADS anxiety | − 0.9 (− 2.7 to 0.9) | 8 | 0.2 (− 0.8 to 1.2) | 9 | 0.1 (− 4.3 to 4.5) | 9 |
| HADS depression | 1.0 (− 1.5 to 3.5) | 8 | 2.6 (− 0.3 to 5.4) | 9 | 2.2 (− 1.0 to 5.4) | 9 |
| NRS current pain | − 0.6 (− 3.2 to 1.9) | 8 | − 0.6 (− 2.2 to 1.0) | 10 | − 0.8 (− 2.7 to 1.1) | 9 |
| NRS pain over past week | − 0.6 (− 2.4 to 1.2) | 8 | 0.2 (− 2.1 to 2.5) | 10 | − 0.7 (− 3.6 to 2.3) | 9 |
| WEMWBS | − 0.8 (− 5.0 to 3.5) | 8 | − 1.6 (− 5.2 to 2.1) | 9 | − 1.7 (− 6.4 to 3.1) | 9 |
| PROMIS SF fatigue | − 0.6 (− 9.8 to 8.5) | 8 | − 2.3 (− 7.1 to 2.4) | 9 | − 1.6 (− 9.5 to 6.4) | 9 |
| PROMIS SF pain interference | 3.1 (− 4.1 to 10.4) | 8 | 0.0 (− 6.1 to 6.1) | 9 | 1.9 (− 6.3 to 10.1) | 9 |
Negative magnitudes represent decreases in score and positive magnitudes represent increases in score. Start date is defined as the start of placement, for those placed, or the time at which it was decided that a person could not be placed, for those not placed
*n.b final time-point was shorter than six-months for some participants to maximise data collection and longer than 6 months for others due to failure to return on time. The median time from start date to final follow-up was 211 days (IQR 175 to 231)
We mapped EQ-5D 5L scores onto the 3L value set as per the NICE position paper recommendation (see the “Methods” section) [25]
Work-related outcomes relating to the placement
| Outcome | 6-week scores | |
|---|---|---|
| Satisfaction with placement, | 8 | |
| Very satisfied | 4 (50) | |
| Satisfied | 2 (25) | |
| Neither satisfied nor dissatisfied | 0 (0) | |
| Dissatisfied | 1 (12.5) | |
| Very dissatisfied | 1 (12.5) | |
| Psychosocial aspects of work, mean (SD) | ||
| Job satisfaction | 26.0 (9.4) | 8 |
| Social support | 15.4 (5.9) | 8 |
| Mental stress | 14.4 (5.4) | 8 |
| RTW self-efficacy scale, mean (SD) | 7.7 (2.3) | 8 |
| Work functioning role questionnaire, mean (SD) | 55.0 (30.7) | 6 |
| How much did pain interfere with your work? | 8 | |
| Not at all | 1 (12.5) | |
| A little bit | 0 (0) | |
| Moderately | 4 (50) | |
| Quite a lot | 3 (37.5) | |
| Extremely | 0 (0) | |
| How much did work make your pain worse? | 8 | |
| Not at all | 0 (0) | |
| A little bit | 1 (12.5) | |
| Moderately | 3 (37.5) | |
| Quite a lot | 4 (50) | |
| Extremely | 0 (0) |
Job offers, jobs accepted, and jobs (i.e. paid employment) started
| 14-week scores | 6-month scores | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of job offers reported | 2 | 8 | 3 | 9 |
| Number of job offers accepted | 0 | 1¶ | 2 | 3* |
| Number of new jobs started | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2* |
¶i.e. one person received two offers at 14 weeks
*i.e. those who had offers to accept and of those who had accepted offers, respectively
Exemplary quotes from themes emergent from interviews and focus groups
| Quote number | Participant | Quote |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | PESI02 (pain consultant) | “At least 60 to 70% [sic] of the cohort of people we come across have severe mental health issues” |
| 2 | PESI05 (rheumatology physiotherapist | “… all of them will say that on the good days they feel perhaps that they could do something from a work point of view. But then it’s also, you know, they don't know when these bad days are going to be, and it’s that fear of not being able to do it on the, the bad days and the impact that, that has on their condition, and how that would be viewed by the, the potential employer” |
| 3 | PESI11 (recruiter from a non-NHS site) | “Then, there was a few people concerned about how it would affect their benefits. … That was, that was a common theme for people that said, ‘No’ or, you know, weren’t interested, because they, I think, for some of them, they felt that if they were on a placement for 16-hours a week, would then, DWP try and make them work 16-hours a week when they, they didn’t feel they were able to? So they couldn’t sort of differentiate when I was trying to say, ‘But this will, the study will help us identify if you can work those hours. Or it might identify that you can’t, but you can work eight.’ But you might not be able to work 16 but some of them just weren’t willing to, sort of give it a go. Yeah. … That was a big thing for people, the benefits.” |
| 4 | PESI07 (placement manager) | “But personally, I felt that I was helping someone ... it's not relevant to this survey [sic] but by my wife has been medically retired for very similar reasons, so I understand my wife’s frustrations. But then also, also being able to bring that into, into work and if, you know, helping somebody that's got something fairly similar get them back into a work ethic and maybe that will, er, leapfrog them into full time work … “ |
| 5 | PESI10 (placement manager) | “… obviously we would like to help out if we can, but we thought, ‘Actually, we need some resource as well,’ and, and so I think, you know, there was a benefit in it for us as well.” |
| 6 | PESI10 (placement manager) | “And, and, if it helped her ultimately, yeah ...glad to be involved. But, um, you know, from our perspectives the process was just too short to warrant the amount of training” |
| 7 | PESI09 (placement manager) | “She didn't talk about anything other than her illness quite voiceably most of the time that she was here. And so that was a very negative impression that she was giving which meant she got quite a lot of negative responses.” |
| 8 | PESI09 (placement manager) | “I think we were surprised funnily enough how much they needed to move around. I think we were expecting people that needed to sit and do sedentary tasks, and actually a lot of them, “No, no, actually my back gets really stiff if I sit, so I need something that's going to involve me moving around” |
| 9 | PESI08 (placement supervisor) | “He started, so, so. He was getting more and more in, as if he was, sort of, really getting into what he was doing. 'Cause he was really doing a good job. And I mean, we were getting the public saying, ‘Who's he?’” |
| 10 | PESI08 (placement supervisor) | “He was very much in a shell to start off with but of course, by coming in with us at break times, which I think was probably quite a good thing to do for him ... he started to talk, people were talking to him.” |
| 11 | PP13 (participant) | “And knowing that we are here and we are trying to fight against all that things. It’s very good, it makes me feel like I’m not alone, there’s a lot of people in the same boat.” |
| 12 | PP17 (participant) | “I think we’re all in agreement that the two-day course was, I found, I thought it was brilliant. And it was, like, tailored to us. But one of the biggest things was when we were all explaining our own individual selves, everybody in the room’s going ...”Yeah, it’s true.” Because they understand. |
| 13 | PP02 (participant) | “she went above and beyond her job by finding out what my specific condition was. And because it was something very different to what a lot of people have then it made it all the more different to me ...” |
| 14 | PP20 (participant) | “And the, fortunately I’m very lucky, *** [placement provider] spoke to someone in the IT audits department and they absorbed me there, and still ongoing in the process, I’ve not completed my six weeks. I think I’ll complete it almost three weeks now. And I really enjoyed the place and the work over there, and actually I thought that I would be underutilised since it’s work experience and with no pay, they might be giving me simple tasks like that. But seeing my potential over there they took me on board and I’m going to do an audit for them.” |
| 15 | PP01 (participant) | “I enjoyed all the groups ([work preparation)] and doing it, but quite disappointing that, that I didn’t come away with anything, I didn’t even get a, a placement.” |
| 16 | PP13 (participant) | “So for me it was a, a great experience even if they didn’t put me, um, into training [placement], because the training [placement] they wanted me to put me was in Birmingham but because in Birmingham I will take one hour and 30 minutes travelling and come back, and I couldn’t because I’m a single mum with my son.” |
| 17 | PP02 (participant) | “And I think with the study as well, because obviously it put me back in touch with, like, people at work, not just social, it gave me back my management confidence, to just go into work ...” |
Commonly negotiated initial workplace adjustments
Making sure people were working at their optimum time of day e.g. when most alert Flexible working (both start and finish times) Providing chairs to sit on when needed Giving breaks Changing work tasks Opportunities to change posture at regular intervals Having designated workstation rather than hot desking Avoiding heavy tasks and lifting Having a named work buddy |
Summary of key findings relating to feasibility, challenges faced, and lessons learned
• It is necessary to allow for an increase in contracting time between the research institution multiple partners. • Matching participants’ skills and aspirations to placement types is difficult in some cases. • It is necessary to ensure a good range of placements up-front, ideally with redundant capacities that match recruitment site areas under the assumption of good recruitment. • It is necessary to ensure early involvement of those who will provide placements and not only high-level management. • Multiple placement providers and recruitment sites are needed. • Employment services sites recruit more participants than NHS pain clinics. • Forming a work plan as a collaborative exercise between participant, case manager, and placement manager works well. • Additional issues surrounding confidence, anxiety, learning difficulties, or comorbidities to chronic pain complicates cases and requires increased case manager time. • Participants value the work preparation session, which facilitates fellowship with those in similar circumstances and removes feelings of isolation. • Some participants find it dispiriting if they are unable to be placed, but these participants still value the work preparation session. • Participants value the support and understanding of the case manager. • Follow-up response rate is relatively poor, and additional effort and consideration may be needed to improve this in a full trial. |