中风后支持重返工作岗位的经验:来自RETAKE试验的纵向案例研究。

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Diane Trusson, Katie Powers, Kathryn Radford, Audrey Bowen, Kristelle Craven, Jain Holmes, Rebecca Lindley, Christopher McKevitt, Julie Phillips, Ellen Thompson, Caroline Watkins, David J Clarke
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:中风后重返工作岗位对中风幸存者的身体、心理和经济都有好处。然而,全球证据估计卒中后1年的重返工作率目标:本文旨在了解参与者在支持下重返工作岗位的经历,并探讨支持或阻碍早期卒中专家职业康复干预实施的社会和结构因素。方法:采用纵向个案研究方法,比较15名接受早期卒中专科职业康复干预加常规护理的参与者和11名只接受常规护理的参与者在12个月内卒中后重返工作岗位的经历。通过随访问卷、健康记录、干预交付记录以及对参与者和7名指定的非正式护理人员的半结构化访谈,在三个时间点收集数据。对提供干预的1名雇主和11名职业治疗师也进行了访谈。环境:英格兰和威尔士的16个国家卫生服务站点。研究结果:在干预组中,中风幸存者、护理人员和雇主报告说,从治疗职业治疗师提供的信息和支持中获益,有助于接受和适应中风后的能力。参与者还重视职业治疗师提供的持续和量身定制的职业康复服务,协调他们的护理,并在与雇主讨论他们重返工作岗位时倡导他们。那些无法回到原来工作岗位的人被支持考虑其他选择。相比之下,接受常规治疗的参与者只有在社区康复支持结束时才有被抛弃的感觉,通常是在2-8周后。通常的护理主要集中在恢复身体功能上,这使得这些参与者很难找到重返工作的信息、建议和支持。纵向案例研究使影响参与者重返工作经历的社会心理和环境因素得以考虑。局限性:流程评估的招募受到COVID-19大流行的影响。事实证明很难招募雇主进行面试,参与案例研究的妇女较少(21名男子,5名妇女)。由于大流行对进入临床区域的限制,无法按计划对干预措施的实施进行直接观察。结论:这些案例研究突出了早期卒中专科职业康复干预加常规护理和仅分配常规护理的参与者之间自我报告的差异。被认为是支持差异的重要方面包括早期中风专家职业康复干预的时间长短,职业治疗师的倡导,雇主联络和持续的工作场所监测。将这些核心内容作为卒中后服务的一部分提供,可支持和帮助恢复工作,并为卒中幸存者和更广泛的社会带来相关益处。资助:本文介绍了由国家卫生与保健研究所(NIHR)卫生技术评估项目资助的独立研究,奖励号为15/130/11。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Experiences of support to return to work after stroke: longitudinal case studies from RETAKE trial.

Background: Returning to work after stroke has physical, psychological and financial benefits for stroke survivors. However, global evidence estimates return-to-work rates 1 year post stroke at < 50%. Although its importance is acknowledged by policy-makers and healthcare providers, vocational rehabilitation is not always part of National Health Service usual care post stroke. Currently, there is limited evidence of the effectiveness of return-to-work support interventions. RETurn to work After stroKE was a multicentre individually randomised controlled pragmatic trial, with embedded process and health economic evaluations. RETurn to work After stroKE aimed to establish whether Early Stroke Specialist Vocational Rehabilitation plus usual care improves the likelihood of return to work at 12 months post stroke compared to usual care alone. As part of an embedded process evaluation, longitudinal case studies enabled exploration of participants' experiences of support to return to work in the trial.

Objectives: This article aims to understand participants' experiences of being supported to return to work and explores the social and structural factors which support, or act as barriers to, implementation of the Early Stroke Specialist Vocational Rehabilitation intervention.

Method: A longitudinal case-study approach was used to compare experiences of post-stroke return-to-work support received over 12 months by 15 participants who received the Early Stroke Specialist Vocational Rehabilitation intervention plus usual care, and 11 participants who received usual care only. Data were gathered at three time points using follow-up questionnaires, health records, intervention delivery records and semistructured interviews with participants and seven nominated informal carers. Interviews were also conducted with 1 employer and 11 occupational therapists delivering the intervention.

Setting: Sixteen National Health Service sites across England and Wales.

Findings: In the intervention arm, stroke survivors, carers and employers reported benefits from information and support from the treating occupational therapist to facilitate acceptance of, and adaptation to, post-stroke abilities. Participants also valued occupational therapists' provision of sustained and tailored vocational rehabilitation, co-ordinating their care and advocating for them in return-to-work discussions with their employers. Those unable to return to their previous employment were supported to consider alternative options. In contrast, participants who received usual care only reported feeling abandoned when community rehabilitation support ended, typically after 2-8 weeks. Usual care largely focused on restoring physical function, leaving these participants struggling to find return-to-work information, advice and support. Longitudinal case studies enabled psychosocial and environmental factors impacting on participants' return-to-work experiences to be considered.

Limitations: Recruitment to the process evaluation was impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. It proved difficult to recruit employers for interview, and fewer women participated in the case studies (21 men, 5 women). Direct observation of intervention delivery could not be carried out as planned due to pandemic restrictions on access to clinical areas.

Conclusions: These case studies highlighted self-reported differences between recipients of the Early Stroke Specialist Vocational Rehabilitation intervention plus usual care and participants allocated to usual care only. Aspects perceived as important in underpinning the differences in support included the length of Early Stroke Specialist Vocational Rehabilitation intervention, occupational therapist advocacy, employer liaison and ongoing workplace monitoring. Provision of these core components as part of post-stroke services may support and help to sustain return to work, with associated benefits for stroke survivors and wider society.

Funding: This article presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme as award number 15/130/11.

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来源期刊
Health technology assessment
Health technology assessment 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
94
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Technology Assessment (HTA) publishes research information on the effectiveness, costs and broader impact of health technologies for those who use, manage and provide care in the NHS.
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