Capturing cases in workers' compensation databases: the example of neck pain

Publication type
Journal article
Authors
Van Eerd D, Cote P, Beaton DE, Hogg-Johnson S, Vidmar M, Kristman VL
Date published
2006 Jul 01
Journal
American Journal of Industrial Medicine
Volume
49
Issue
7
Pages
557-568
PMID
16691612
Open Access?
No
Abstract

BACKGROUND: There is a need to more accurately enumerate workers with musculoskeletal injuries who make lost-time claims to workers compensation boards. The objective of this study is to develop an approach to more accurately enumerate these workers. METHODS: Lost-time claims to the Ontario Workplace Safety & Insurance Board (WSIB) were reviewed. Using neck pain as an example, nature of injury and part of body codes were identified to classify cases. Claims of a random sample of 434 claimants were reviewed. The proportion of claimants classified as having neck pain was computed. RESULTS: The proportion of claimants classified with soft-tissue injuries to the neck varied from 0.88 for codes including 'neck/cervical region,' 0.69 for 'back region' to 0.05 for those coded as 'shoulder/upper arm.' CONCLUSIONS: Restricting the enumeration of injuries to specific part of body codes can lead to a gross underestimation of the magnitude of soft-tissue disorders in epidemiological studies using workers' compensation data. The proposed approach leads to more accurate enumeration