Determinants of duration of disability and return-to-work after work-related injury and illness: challenges for future research

Publication type
Journal article
Authors
Krause N, Frank JW, Dasinger LK, Sullivan TJ, Sinclair S
Date published
2001 Oct 01
Journal
American Journal of Industrial Medicine
Volume
40
Issue
4
Pages
464-484
PMID
11598995
Open Access?
No
Abstract

BACKGROUND: The purpose of this review was to identify critical data and research needs in addressing the following question: What are the primary factors that affect the time lost from work, return-to-work (RTW), subsequent unemployment, and changes in occupation after disabling illness or injury? METHODS: Review of the literature to identify research challenges originating from the multitude of disciplines, data sources, outcome measures, and methodological and analytical problems. RESULTS: About 100 different determinants of RTW outcomes were identified. Their impact varies across different phases of the disablement process. Recommendations are provided for addressing five selected research challenges. CONCLUSION: Interdisciplinary research needs to develop a comprehensive conceptual framework. Priority should be given to studies on specific domains of risk factors meeting five selection criteria: amenability to change; relevance to users of research; generalizability across health conditions, disability phases, and settings; 'degree of promise' as derived from qualitative exploratory studies; and capacity to improve measurement instruments. Combining qualitative and quantitative research methods is necessary to bridge existing knowledge gaps