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Journal Article

Citation

Walker WC, Marwitz JH, Kreutzer JS, Hart T, Novack TA. Arch. Phys. Med. Rehabil. 2006; 87(12): 1576-1582.

Affiliation

Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA 23298-0661, USA. wcwalker@mail2.vcu.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.apmr.2006.08.335

PMID

17141636

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To further evaluate determinants of return to work (RTW) after traumatic brain injury (TBI), with focus on the relation between preinjury occupational category and RTW outcome. DESIGN: Prospective collaborative cohort study. SETTING: Seventeen National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research-designated Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems. PARTICIPANTS: Consecutive sample of 1341 patients (age range, 18-62y) who were hospitalized with a TBI diagnosis, received both acute neurotrauma services and inpatient rehabilitation services, consented to participate, were employed before injury, and completed a 1-year follow-up assessment. INTERVENTION: An inpatient interdisciplinary brain injury rehabilitation program. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Competitive employment at 1 year postinjury. RESULTS: Participants were categorized into 1 of 3 groups depending on preinjury occupational title: professional/managerial (n=192), skilled (n=751), or manual labor (n=398). Chi-square analyses were computed to examine changes across occupation groups between preinjury occupation group and postinjury RTW. The rate of successful RTW was greatest for professional/managerial (56%), lower for skilled (40%), and lowest for manual labor (32%), yielding an odds ratio of 2.959 between the highest and lowest groups. Of those with successful RTW, most did so within the same occupational category grouping. A multiple logistic regression showed that preinjury occupation, education level, discharge FIM score, age, sex, marital status, and hospital length of stay each influenced RTW. CONCLUSIONS: Prior research has shown that preinjury employment status (employed vs unemployed) greatly influences the odds of successful RTW after TBI. A related hypothesis, that occupational classification also influences RTW outcome, has been understudied and has yielded conflicting results. The current study shows convincingly that the type of occupation influences RTW outcome, with the best prospect for RTW among people with professional/managerial jobs. Occupational category should be examined in the future development of predictive models for RTW after TBI.


Language: en

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