Return to work within a year after first stroke: blue and white collar workers comparison, predictors and causal mediation assessed during inpatient rehabilitation.

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q1 REHABILITATION
Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-02-20 DOI:10.1080/10749357.2024.2312640
Alejandro Garcia-Rudolph, Mark Wright, Katryna Cisek, Loreto Garcia, Hector Cusso, Joan Sauri, Eloy Opisso
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Most research focuses around impairments in body function and structure, with relatively only a small number exploring their social impact.

Objectives: 1) compare characteristics for individuals who before stroke were blue collar vs. white collar workers 2) identify clinical, functional, and job-related factors associated with return to work within 1 year after discharge 3) identify specific ADL individual items (assessed at rehabilitation discharge) as return to work predictors and 4) identify return to work causal mediators.

Methods: Retrospective observational cohort study, analyzing adult patients with stroke admitted to rehabilitation between 2007 and 2021, including baseline Barthel Index (BI) and return to work assessments between 2008 and 2022. Kaplan-Meier survival curves and Cox proportional hazards were applied. Causal mediation analyses using 1000-bootstrapped simulations were performed.

Results: A total of 802 individuals were included (14.6% returned to work), 53.6% blue-collar and 46.4% white-collar. Blue-collar workers showed significantly higher proportion of ischemic stroke, diabetes, dyslipidemia, and hypertension.Individuals not returning to work presented a higher proportion of blue collar, dominant side affected, aphasia, lower BI scores, and larger length of stay (LOS). Multivariable Cox proportional hazards identified age at injury, aphasia, hypertension, and total discharge BI score (C-Index = 0.74). Univariable Cox models identified three independent BI items at all levels of independence: bathing (C-Index = 0.58), grooming (C-Index = 0.56) and feeding (C-Index = 0.59). BI efficiency (gain/LOS) was a causal mediator.

Conclusion: Blue collar workers showed higher proportion of risk factors and comorbidities. Novel factors, predictors, and a return to work mediator were identified.

首次中风后一年内重返工作岗位:住院康复期间蓝领和白领的比较、预测因素和因果中介评估。
背景:大多数研究集中于身体功能和结构的损伤,相对而言,只有少数研究探讨了这些损伤对社会的影响:1)比较中风前蓝领工人与白领工人的特征 2)确定与出院后 1 年内重返工作岗位相关的临床、功能和工作相关因素 3)确定具体的 ADL 个人项目(康复出院时评估)作为重返工作岗位的预测因素 4)确定重返工作岗位的因果中介因素:回顾性观察队列研究,分析 2007 年至 2021 年期间接受康复治疗的成年脑卒中患者,包括基线 Barthel 指数(BI)和 2008 年至 2022 年期间的重返工作评估。研究采用了卡普兰-梅耶生存曲线和考克斯比例危害分析。使用1000次引导模拟进行了因果中介分析:共纳入 802 人(14.6% 的人重返工作岗位),其中 53.6% 为蓝领工人,46.4% 为白领工人。蓝领工人患缺血性中风、糖尿病、血脂异常和高血压的比例明显较高。未重返工作岗位者患蓝领、优势侧受累、失语、BI 评分较低和住院时间(LOS)较长的比例较高。多变量 Cox 比例危险度确定了受伤时的年龄、失语症、高血压和出院时的 BI 总分(C-Index = 0.74)。单变量 Cox 模型确定了所有独立程度的三个独立 BI 项目:洗澡(C-Index = 0.58)、梳理(C-Index = 0.56)和喂食(C-Index = 0.59)。BI效率(收益/LOS)是一个因果中介因素:结论:蓝领工人的风险因素和合并症比例较高。结论:蓝领工人的风险因素和合并症比例较高,发现了新的因素、预测因素和重返工作的中介因素。
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来源期刊
Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation
Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation 医学-康复医学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
4.50%
发文量
57
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation is the leading journal devoted to the study and dissemination of interdisciplinary, evidence-based, clinical information related to stroke rehabilitation. The journal’s scope covers physical medicine and rehabilitation, neurology, neurorehabilitation, neural engineering and therapeutics, neuropsychology and cognition, optimization of the rehabilitation system, robotics and biomechanics, pain management, nursing, physical therapy, cardiopulmonary fitness, mobility, occupational therapy, speech pathology and communication. There is a particular focus on stroke recovery, improving rehabilitation outcomes, quality of life, activities of daily living, motor control, family and care givers, and community issues. The journal reviews and reports clinical practices, clinical trials, state-of-the-art concepts, and new developments in stroke research and patient care. Both primary research papers, reviews of existing literature, and invited editorials, are included. Sharply-focused, single-issue topics, and the latest in clinical research, provide in-depth knowledge.
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