| Literature DB >> 36085067 |
Mariska de Wit1,2, Hendrika P Zijlstra3, Carel T J Hulshof4,5, Sylvia J van der Burg-Vermeulen4,5, Angela G E M de Boer4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cognitions and perceptions of workers with chronic health problems, such as catastrophizing thoughts and fear-avoidance beliefs, can negatively influence work participation. The Progressive Goal Attainment Program (PGAP) is an intervention developed in Canada with the aim of decreasing limiting cognitions and perceptions and increasing work participation. The objective of this protocol article is to describe the design of a randomized controlled superiority trial to study whether PGAP is effective in decreasing limiting cognitions and perceptions and increasing workability and work participation of workers with chronic health problems in the Netherlands.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic health problems; Cognitions; Intervention; Netherlands; PGAP; Perceptions; Progressive Goal Attainment Program; Work participation; Workability; Workers
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36085067 PMCID: PMC9463759 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-022-06698-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.728
Fig. 1PGAP study flow-chart
Schedule of enrollment, interventions, and assessments
Content PGAP sessions [13]
| Session | Content |
|---|---|
| Session 1 | – Use of disclosure to establish a therapeutic relationship – Discussing activities that were performed by the client before the start of his/her complaints – Instructions on how to use the client workbook |
| Session 2 | – Introduction to activity planning – Re-establishing pre-injury activity structure – Introduction to walking routine |
| Session 3 | – Setting short and long-term activity goals – Planning activity involvement in relation to goals |
| Session 4 | – Techniques targeting disability beliefs – Mid-treatment evaluation to see whether return to work is possible |
| Session 5 | – Feedback about the mid-treatment evaluation – Introduction to thought monitoring to target catastrophic thinking |
| Session 6 | – Exposure techniques to facilitate re-engagement in previously avoided activities |
| Session 7 | – Continued application of techniques introduced in sessions 5 and 6 |
| Session 8 | – Applying task decomposition techniques to feared activities of the workplace |
| Session 9 | – Problem-solving challenges to resumption of occupational activities – Final evaluation |
| Session 10 | – Evaluation feedback and discharge planning |
From “A Psychosocial Risk-Targeted Intervention to Reduce Work Disability: Development, Evolution, and Implementation Challenges” by M.J.L. Sullivan, H. Adams, and T. Ellis, 2013, Psychological Injury and Law, 6, 253
Fig. 2Model mediators following the approach of Baron and Kenny [45]