Dr. Dorcas Beaton
Dr. Dorcas Beaton is a senior scientist at the Institute for Work & Health, where she is a member of the measurement research group and the lead researcher for a health measurement scale called the DASH (Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand) Outcome Measure. She has recently retired from a long tenure as a scientist and director of musculoskeletal health and outcomes research at the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute at St. Michael's Hospital. She has held an associate professor in the Department of Occupational Therapy at the University of Toronto along with graduate appointments in the Rehabilitation Sciences Institute and the Clinical Epidemiology Program of Health Policy Management and Evaluation, both at the University of Toronto.
Beaton is currently on the executive of OMERACT (Outcome Measurement in Rheumatology Research), an international organization promoting evidence-based outcome selection for core outcome sets in clinical trials in musculoskeletal disorders. She is chair of the methodology group and co-chair of the technical advisory group at OMERACT.
With a background in occupational therapy, Beaton worked as a clinician for several years in orthopedics and upper extremity rehabilitation before transitioning to research. She holds an MSc in clinical epidemiology and a PhD in health measurement, specifically on the interpretation of change scores from outcome measures.
Beaton's research interests focus on measurement (i.e. measuring disability, work disability and recovery, as well as interpreting scores), translation of measurement into clinical practice, and the treatment and rehabilitation of musculoskeletal disorders. She conducts quantitative and qualitative research, and supervises graduate students interested in musculoskeletal conditions and measurement-related sciences.
“Why do I focus on health measurement? I’m intrigued by how people know they’re getting better. People gauge their recovery from a musculoskeletal condition in many different ways. Some adapt to a disability; some redefine what good health means. Others experience improvements to pain and functional limitations, and a large focus of my work has been to develop and improve pain measures to capture these improvements.” – Dr. Dorcas Beaton
Projects
- Role of health-care providers in the workers’ compensation system and return-to-work process. Funded by Workers Compensation Board of Manitoba. Completed.
Publications
- D'Agostino MA, Boers M, Kirwan JR, van der Heijde D, Ostergaard M, Schett G, Landewe RB, Maksymowych WP, Naredo E, Dougados M, Iagnocco A, Bingham CO, Brooks PM, Beaton DE, Gandjbakhch F, Gossec L, Guillemin F, Hewlett S, Kloppenburg M, March L, Mease PJ, Moller I, Simon LS, Singh JA, Strand V, Wakefield RJ, Wells GA, Tugwell P, Conaghan PG. Updating the OMERACT filter: implications for imaging and soluble biomarkers. Journal of Rheumatology. 2014;41(5):1016-1024. doi:10.3899/jrheum.131313.
- Kirwan JR, Boers M, Hewlett S, Beaton DE, Bingham CO, Choy E, Conaghan PG, D'Agostino MA, Dougados M, Furst DE, Guillemin F, Gossec L, van der Heijde D, Kloppenburg M, Kvien TK, Landewe RB, Mackie SL, Matteson EL, Mease PJ, Merkel PA, Ostergaard M, Saketkoo LA, Simon LS, Singh JA, Strand V, Tugwell P. Updating the OMERACT filter: core areas as a basis for defining core outcome sets. Journal of Rheumatology. 2014;41(5):994-999. doi:10.3899/jrheum.131309.
- Tugwell P, Boers M, D'Agostino MA, Beaton DE, Boonen A, Bingham CO, Choy E, Conaghan PG, Dougados M, Duarte C, Furst DE, Guillemin F, Gossec L, Heiberg T, van der Heijde D, Hewlett S, Kirwan JR, Kvien TK, Landewe RB, Mease PJ, Ostergaard M, Simon LS, Singh JA, Strand V, Wells GA. Updating the OMERACT filter: implications of filter 2.0 to select outcome instruments through assessment of 'truth': content, face, and construct validity. Journal of Rheumatology. 2014;41(5):1000-1004. doi:10.3899/jrheum.131310.
- Tang K, Boonen A, Verstappen SM, Escorpizo R, Luime J, Lacaille D, Fautrel B, Bosworth A, Cifaldi M, Gignac MA, Hofstetter C, Leong A, Montie P, Peterson IF, Purcaru O, Bombardier C, Tugwell P, Beaton DE. Worker productivity outcome measures: OMERACT filter evidence and agenda for future research. Journal of Rheumatology. 2014;41(1):165-176. doi:10.3899/jrheum.130815.
- Smith PM, Bielecky A, Ibrahim S, Mustard C, Saunders R, Beaton DE, Koehoorn M, McLeod CB, Scott-Marshall H, Hogg-Johnson S. Impact of pre-existing chronic conditions on age differences in sickness absence after a musculoskeletal work injury: a path analysis approach. Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health. 2014;40(2):167-175. doi:10.5271/sjweh.3397.
Speaker Series presentations
- DASHBash: Celebrating 20 years of the DASH Outcome Measure. IWH Speaker Series. February 23, 2016.
Interviews and articles
- IWH Updates - Summer 2016. At Work: Institute for Work & Health; No. 85, Summer 2016.
- DASH developers credit groundwork and ongoing support for measure’s 20-year success. At Work: Institute for Work & Health; No. 84, Spring 2016.
- IWH Updates - Winter 2015. At Work: Institute for Work & Health; No. 79, Winter 2015.
- Newly adopted productivity measures help people with arthritis stay at work. At Work: Institute for Work & Health; No. 77, Summer 2014.
- IWH research now has two new “applications”. At Work: Institute for Work & Health; No. 73, Summer 2013.