Duration of work disability after low back injury: A comparison of administrative and self-reported outcomes
β Scribed by Lisa K. Dasinger; Niklas Krause; Leo J. Deegan; Richard J. Brand; Linda Rudolph
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 213 KB
- Volume
- 35
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0271-3586
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Background:
Workers' compensation wage replacement data have recently been used to estimate time to return to work (rtw) and the number of work days lost after occupational injury. the degree to which indemnity-based measures reflect self-reported work disability has until now not been studied.
Method:
Kaplan-meier curves of administrative and self-reported measures of duration of work disability were compared within a sample of 433 low back injury claimants followed up for 1 to 3.7 years.
Results:
Administrative measures consistently and significantly underestimated the duration of disability when compared to self-reported measures of rtw. the difference between the estimated mean number of work days lost for comparable administrative and self-reported measures ranged from 142 to 334 days.
Conclusions:
Number of work days lost after low back injury is substantially underestimated by measures based on the duration of wage replacement benefits. this calls into question the adequacy of indemnity benefits and underscores the need for disability prevention programs.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Background: Studies of low back pain (lbp) disability remain largely incomparable because of different outcome definitions. to date, systematic comparisons of alternative outcome measures have not been made. ## Methods: Duration of work disability was studied in a 3-year cohort of 850 workers'