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Journal Article

Citation

Kurtaran A, Akbal A, Ersöz M, Selçuk B, Yalçın E, Akyüz M. Spinal Cord 2009; 47(9): 709-712.

Affiliation

Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Ankara Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Training and Research Hospital of Ministry of Health, Ankara, Turkey.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, International Spinal Cord Society, Publisher Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1038/sc.2009.79

PMID

19564883

Abstract

Study design:A cross-sectional survey.Objectives:To investigate the changes in the occupation of patients after spinal cord injury (SCI) and the factors that cause this change.Subjects:The study involved 192 Turkish patients (41 female, 151 male) who had suffered SCI. The mean age of patients was 36.1+/-12.0 years. The mean follow-up time was 43.4+/-38.0 months. Before injury, 138 patients were employed in gainful occupations, 26 patients were housewives, 10 were retired, 7 were students and 11 patients were unemployed. Only 15 patients (7.8%) returned to their original occupations after injury. Thirteen patients (6.8%) are currently working in another job; 1 patient (0.5%) is a student; 10 (5.2%) are retired as was earlier; 40 (20.8%) are retired on grounds of disability; 26 (13.5%) are housewives; and 87 patients (45.3%) are currently unemployed.Methods:Prospective data collection through a face-to-face interview on an established SCI Turkish sample.Results:In our study, the rate of returning to work was found to be 14.6%. In the evaluation of factors affecting return to work after injury, educational level (P=0.00), pre-injury employment (P=0.01) and bladder-emptying method (P=0.03) were statistically significantly correlated with return to work.Conclusion:In this study, education, pre-injury employment and bladder-emptying method were found to be important factors in returning to work after SCI.


Language: en

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