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Journal Article

Citation

Young AE, Muhlner S, Kurowski A, Cifuentes M. Work 2014; 51(2): 327-336.

Affiliation

Work Environment, University of Massachusetts, Lowell, MA, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, IOS Press)

DOI

10.3233/WOR-141949

PMID

25248529

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Rural residents with work-related fractures utilize healthcare differently and return to work (RTW) sooner than their similarly-injured urban peers.

OBJECTIVE: To elucidate the relationship between physical medicine and rehabilitation (PM&R) service usage and work-disability duration following work-related injury.

DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study, employing a two-phase sequential analysis. The project involved a longitudinal analysis of PM&R utilization and work-disability duration of 2,216 people across the U.S. who fractured a bone, received PM&R services, and had at least seven days off work. In the first phase of the analysis each individual was assigned a PM&R utilization score based on how similar his or her usage was to that typical of rural residents. The second phase tested the relationship between assigned PM&R utilization scores and work-disability duration.

RESULTS: Differences in urban versus rural PM&R utilization included less total PM&R services and fewer passive services in the first 8 weeks for rural claimants. Among those off work for more than a month, rural residents used more active services just prior to RTW, with a gradual decreasing of services leading up to RTW. Controlling for covariates, aggregate PM&R utilization scores were found to relate to time to first RTW (Hazard Ratio=1.66, p < 0.005).

CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest that using services in a way that is more consistent with rural patterns is associated with decreased work-disability durations. Consistent with previous studies, results suggest that passive services, prolonged episodes of care, and failure to focus on transitioning to self-management are related to longer work-disability durations.


Language: en

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