Association between community distress and return to work after burn injury

IF 3.2 3区 医学 Q2 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Burns Pub Date : 2024-10-18 DOI:10.1016/j.burns.2024.107294
Lauren L. Agoubi , Scha’Chia Murphy , Kara McMullen , Gretchen J. Carrougher , Stephanie A. Mason , Damien W. Carter , Callie M. Thompson , Karen Kowalske , John W. Scott , Barclay T. Stewart
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Abstract

Introduction

Community-level disadvantage is associated with reduced quality of life after burn injury. We evaluated the association between community-level disadvantage and return to work after burn injury.

Methods

A multicenter burn injury database was queried from 1998–2021. Participants 18–65 years old with documented employment status and ZIP codes were included. Exposures were community distress (Distressed Communities Index, DCI), patient demographics, and burn characteristics. The primary outcome was odds of employment 6 months after burn injury using stepwise logistic regression models, first with patient-level variables, then DCI. An interaction term was included to evaluate the modification of DCI and post-injury employment by race.

Results

1960 participants were included, with a median age of 39.2 years (IQR 29.2, 49.3); 81 % were White, 75 % male, and 74 % were working at the time of injury. Participants unemployed 6 months post-injury were more often older, female, non-White, and unemployed at injury, with larger burn sizes and longer hospitalizations. 59 % of participants unemployed at 6 months were employed at the time of injury. Residence in the highest distress ZIP codes was associated with 2.21 (95 % CI 1.39–3.52) odds of 6 month unemployment. Older age, larger burn size, more operations, Black race, and pre-injury unemployment were associated with the greatest odds of unemployment. The interaction between race and DCI was not statistically significant.

Conclusion

Patients from the highest distress communities have twice the odds of unemployment 6 months after injury. This association did not vary by race. Screening for DCI by ZIP code may be a useful tool to focus vocational rehabilitation resources.
烧伤后社区困境与重返工作岗位之间的关系。
简介社区层面的不利条件与烧伤后生活质量的降低有关。我们评估了社区层面的不利条件与烧伤后重返工作岗位之间的关系:我们查询了 1998-2021 年间的多中心烧伤数据库。我们纳入了有就业状况和邮政编码记录的 18-65 岁的参与者。暴露因素包括社区窘迫(窘迫社区指数,DCI)、患者人口统计学特征和烧伤特征。主要结果是烧伤 6 个月后的就业几率,采用逐步逻辑回归模型,首先是患者水平变量,然后是 DCI。该模型还包含一个交互项,以评估DCI和伤后就业率对种族的影响:共纳入 1960 名参与者,中位年龄为 39.2 岁(IQR 29.2 - 49.3);81% 为白人,75% 为男性,74% 在受伤时有工作。受伤后 6 个月失业的参与者通常年龄较大、女性、非白人、受伤时失业、烧伤面积较大、住院时间较长。在受伤后 6 个月失业的参与者中,59% 在受伤时有工作。居住在受影响最大的邮政编码与 6 个月内失业的几率为 2.21(95 % CI 1.39-3.52)相关。年龄越大、烧伤面积越大、手术次数越多、黑人种族以及受伤前失业与失业几率最大相关。种族与 DCI 之间的交互作用在统计学上并不显著:结论:来自最贫困社区的患者在受伤 6 个月后失业的几率是正常人的两倍。这种关联并不因种族而异。按邮政编码筛查DCI可能是集中职业康复资源的有用工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Burns
Burns 医学-皮肤病学
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
18.50%
发文量
304
审稿时长
72 days
期刊介绍: Burns aims to foster the exchange of information among all engaged in preventing and treating the effects of burns. The journal focuses on clinical, scientific and social aspects of these injuries and covers the prevention of the injury, the epidemiology of such injuries and all aspects of treatment including development of new techniques and technologies and verification of existing ones. Regular features include clinical and scientific papers, state of the art reviews and descriptions of burn-care in practice. Topics covered by Burns include: the effects of smoke on man and animals, their tissues and cells; the responses to and treatment of patients and animals with chemical injuries to the skin; the biological and clinical effects of cold injuries; surgical techniques which are, or may be relevant to the treatment of burned patients during the acute or reconstructive phase following injury; well controlled laboratory studies of the effectiveness of anti-microbial agents on infection and new materials on scarring and healing; inflammatory responses to injury, effectiveness of related agents and other compounds used to modify the physiological and cellular responses to the injury; experimental studies of burns and the outcome of burn wound healing; regenerative medicine concerning the skin.
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