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Journal Article

Citation

Zwerling CS, Ryan J. Am. J. Ind. Med. 1991; 19(4): 531-538.

Affiliation

Boston Medical Unit, United States Postal Service.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1991, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

2035551

Abstract

An increased risk, after lumbar laminectomy, for lost work time occupational back injury (odds ratio, 5.9; 95% confidence interval, 1.9-18.8) and disability (mean 292.8 days vs. 24.8 for controls) was previously demonstrated. Such differences could be due to physical sequelae of back surgery or to psychosocial factors. Extensive literature addresses the impact of psychosocial factors on the incidence of occupational injury and severity of disability. This study assumes that psychosocial factors would affect both back and non-back injuries, while surgery-related physical factors would not. The odds ratio for non-back lost work time injury for subjects in the same cohort studied previously was 1.5 (0.5-4.5), with no significant increase in duration of disability (mean 27.0 days vs. 24.8 for controls). The increased risk for back injury in the absence of an increased risk for other injuries suggests that physiologic rather than psychosocial factors provide the more likely explanation for the differences in back injuries.


Language: en

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