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Objectives. To review literature on effectiveness of workplace-based rehabilitation interventions for injured workers with work-related low back pain (LBP) - focused on secondary prevention interventions To determine quality of articles using quality guidelines (MacDermid, 2004)
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1. Systematic Review of Workplace Rehabilitation Interventions for Work- Related Low Back Pain Dr Renee Williams, Professor Muriel Westmorland,
Chia-Yu Lin, Gloria Schmuck & Marg Creen
School of Rehabilitation Science McMaster University Hamilton Ontario, Canada
2. Objectives To review literature on effectiveness of workplace-based rehabilitation interventions for injured workers with work-related low back pain (LBP) - focused on secondary prevention interventions
To determine quality of articles using quality guidelines (MacDermid, 2004) & levels of evidence (Centre for Evidence Based Medicine 2001)
3. Background – Why LBP? LBP is major challenge to employers, employees & service providers ( Tulder et al 1995; Wadell 1987)
Reviews have examined effectiveness of workplace interventions for LBP (van Tulder et al, 2000; Heymans et al, 2004)
Inconclusive - methodological problems (sample sizes, inadequate descriptions of interventions)
Did not distinguish between clinical vs workplace &
primary vs secondary prevention (Tveito et al, 200; Volinn, 1999)
4. Methods 2 academics, 1 experienced clinician, 1 Disability Management consultant & 1 kinesiologist
Inclusion Criteria
Intervention was carried out at workplace
Participants had work-related LBP
Intervention involved secondary prevention
Study design was prospective or cross-sectional
Study published in English
5. Search Strategy MEDLINE, CINAHL (Cumulative Index to Nursing & Allied Health Literature), EMBASE (Excerpta Medica Database) & AMED (Allied & Complementary Medicine) Jan 1982 to Apr 2005
Search Terms
back pain; return to work; disabled persons; job accommodation; rehabilitation; occupational health services; workplace
6. Search Strategy . . . 1,224 abstracts - 198 full text articles identified
54 articles randomly allocated to 2 pairs reviewers
15 articles/10 studies met eligibility criteria
Reasons For Exclusion
Intervention was not workplace based
Participants did not sustain work-related LBP
Article was case study not primary research
Intervention was primary prevention & not secondary prevention
7. Review by Team 2 pairs reviewers evaluated articles using
Quality guidelines (MacDermid, 2004)
24 specific research design elements
2 = best score (high quality); 1 = acceptable (fair quality); 0 = poor (low quality or unmet criteria)
Total possible score = 48
Levels of evidence (Centre for Evidence Based Medicine, 2001) were assigned
8. Levels of Evidence (Centre for EBM, 2001) 1a = Systematic review of RCT studies
1b = individual RCT
2a = Systematic review of cohort studies
2b = Individual cohort study
3a = Systematic review of case control studies
3b = Individual case control study
4 = Case series
5 = Expert opinion
9. Results (15 articles) 4 RCTs
Karjalainen et al, 2004; 2003; Alexandre et al, 2001; Loisel et al, 1997
7 Cohort Studies With Control Groups
Anema et al, 2004; Durand & Loisel, 2001; Cooper et al 1998; Grayzel et al, 1997; Yassi et al, 1995; Cooper et al, 1996; Linton, 1991
4 Cohort Studies Without Control Groups
Anema et al, 2003; Bakhtiar et al, 2002; Jellema et al 2002;
Cooper et al, 1997
10. Quality Ratings
11. Quality Ratings . . .
12. Categories Early RTW/modified work
Clinical interventions with occupational interventions
Ergonomics including exercises & lumbar supports
Exercise & workplace visit
Supervisor involvement for return to work
13. 1. Early RTW/Modified Work 2 yr study in Canadian hospital (Yassi et al, 1995; Cooper et al, 1998; 1997; 1996)
60 nurses with LBP (intervention group) & 158 nurses (control)
Intervention = assessment, treatment & modified work
Findings - rates of back injury & lost-time injuries decreased by 23% (intervention) & increased by 44% (control) & decreases in pain & disability
14. 2. Clinical Interventions With Occupational Interventions Loisel et al (1997) - 130 employees from 31 workplaces
Randomized to:
usual care
clinical/rehab intervention
occupational intervention
combination of 2 & 3
Findings - full intervention group returned to work 2.4 times faster than usual care
15. 2. Clinical interventions With Occupational Interventions . . . As part of Loisel study, Durand & Loisel (2001) examined therapeutic return to work (TRW) with 28 employees & 99 (control)
Findings - at 2 yr follow up, 93% in TRW working & had less pain but control group was not randomly selected
16. 3. Ergonomics Including Exercises & Lumbar Supports Anema et al (2003) evaluated participatory ergonomics (n = 35)
Findings – satisfied with program but no control group & small sample size
Anema et al (2004) examined ergonomic supports for 1631 employees (Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, Germany, Israel & USA)
Findings – ergonomics was effective on rate of RTW
17. 3. Ergonomics Including Exercises & Lumbar Supports . . . Bakhtiar et al, (2002) examined ergonomics & exercises in 15 milk vendors & 15 goldsmiths
Findings - 13/15 & 14/15 recovered but
description of intervention/results limited
Alexandre et al, (2001) evaluated exercise & education in 27 nursing aids & 29 (control)
Findings - reduction in pain but retrospective study
18. 3. Ergonomics Including Exercises & Lumbar Supports Jellema et al, (2002) studied lumbar supports in 59 home care workers
Findings – disability decreased
but no control group & psychometric properties of survey tool were not tested
19. 4. Exercise & Workplace Visit Karjalainen et al, (2004; 2003) Randomized to:
group 1 (n = 56) Mini intervention (light mobilization & graded activity
group 2 (n = 51) Mini intervention & worksite visit
group 3 (n= 57) Usual care
Findings - average sick days group 1 = 19; group 2 = 28 & group 3 = 41
At 2 yrs decreased pain sustained & workplace visit (group 2) did not add to its effectiveness
20. 4. Exercises & Workplace Visit . . . Grayzel et al (1997) - compared in-house PT (n = 10) to outside PT (n = 120)
Findings - lost days reduced in intervention group was 28 versus 57 in controls but small sample size
21. 5. Supervisor Involvement for RTW Linton (1991) examined education about back & neck injuries - 22 supervisors vs 14 control supervisors
Findings - Intervention group rated knowledge higher, contacted sick employees more often, felt they initiated more ergonomic improvements but sampling bias & male supervisors
22. Summary 15 articles - 8 medium (32) to very high (48)
Key Messages
Clinical interventions with occupational interventions are effective in RTW & reducing pain & disability
Early RTW/modified work is effective in reducing rates & disability
Exercises & ergonomic interventions are important
23. Limitations Quality guidelines –psychometric properties?
Some outcome measures discussed in articles were unknown
Selection bias of articles
24. Conclusions More quality studies on workplace rehabilitation interventions for LBP are necessary to promote early & safe return to work & to reduce number of lost-time injuries
25. Questions