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Assessment of Activity Limitations, a Basis for Understanding the Need for Sickness Certificate and Rehabilitation

Not Applicable
Active, not recruiting
Conditions
Sick Leave
Interventions
Other: Assessment of activity limitations, SDO and DOA
Other: Control group
Registration Number
NCT05772494
Lead Sponsor
Göteborg University
Brief Summary

In Sweden mental disorders have the highest proportion of sickness absence and sickness spells. One cause for this is proposed as the lack of knowledge on which activity limitations that have an impact on the ability to return to work. Further, there is a knowledge gap concerning the effect of which early measures from the health system, assessments and early rehabilitation interventions, that enables return to work. Such early measures have been proposed to have a more multidimensional perspective, than to solely focus on specific tasks during a work situation.

The aim of the current project is to examine the effect of an early assessment of activity limitations, made by occupational therapists within specialized psychiatric care, at the time for the next prolonged sickness certification. The assessment will be included in the sickness certificate, and results will be compared between the intervention group and a control group. The results are calculated for differences on treatment measures, prevalence of questions from the Social Insurance Agency and changes in the patterns for sick leave spells. Further, the prevalence of activity limitations and the sick listed participants assessments of the effect of the intervention will be presented.

The results are expected to lead to more adequate interventions for the individual regarding support to return to work, better routines for assessment and rehabilitation within the health care system, which in turn can facilitate decisions for sickness benefits and further have an impact on the long sick leave spells concerning mental disorders.

Detailed Description

Several individuals diagnosed with mental health disorders get sick-listed, and further, stay within the sick-leave process for a prolonged period. More research has been warranted both concerning how to assess activity limitations and future work capacity when having a psychiatric diagnose, but also when it comes to find suitable measures for supporting individuals to return to work. Such supportive and rehabilitative measures could be situated within the healthcare system, such as specialized psychiatric care. To conduct these measures, both early assessments as well as investigation of the effect of taken measures are needed. The present study concerns an expanded assessment of activity limitations as a basis for possible interventions with a focus on the individuals sick-leave process.

The understanding of work capacity has been proposed as a complex phenomenon, where several perspectives are needed. The contribution from occupational therapist in the teamwork implies being focussed on activity limitations or facilitators in contrast to solely focussing on body functions or symptoms. In the professional vocabular, activities are named occupations, meaning that the actual performance is influenced both by individual experiences and influenced by factors in the environment. Another assumption is that all everyday life occupations are interacting, and thus could have an impact on work capacity.

The purpose with this randomized, controlled trial is to evaluate if an early and expanded assessment made by occupational therapist, and with the use of two validated instruments A Dialogue About Ability Related to Work (DOA) and Satisfaction with Daily Occupations (SDO), can have an impact on choice of interventions, changes in the patterns for sick leave spells as well as prevalence of questions from the Social Insurance Agency (SIA) and the participators evaluation of effects from being part of the project. The chosen instruments are described as complementing each other, where DOA examines an overall summary of prerequisites for work capacity, and SDO adds a broader understanding of a person's occupations in everyday life, including satisfaction and balance between different occupational arenas such as work, un-paid work, leisure etc.

The project will be carried out in specialized, psychiatric teams within the Region Västra Götaland. The aim is to recruit 150 participants (75 to the intervention group and 75 to the control group). The participants will be randomly and consecutively divided into intervention or control group. Inclusion criteria are all patients registered at the chosen psychiatric care centres, in need for their second sickness certificate within the unit. Exclusion criteria are patients with specific diagnosis belonging to another unit within the psychiatric organization, and if the patient is assessed as being in an acute vulnerable situation where the planned intervention could negatively influence the situation. Register follow-ups on health care treatment, sick-leave spells, questions from SIA will be made 6 and 12 months later. The participant questionnaire will be sent 6 months after the intervention. Four studies are planned to evaluate the intervention.

The study is a collaborative project involving Region Västra Götaland. The research team comprise researchers from Göteborg University (C Andersson and K Holmgren) and from Region Västra Götaland (C Melin). The study has been submitted to the Regional Ethical Review Board.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
150
Inclusion Criteria
  • All patients registered at the chosen psychiatric care centers, in need for their second or third sickness certificate within the unit.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Patients with specific diagnosis belonging to another unit within the psychiatric organization.
  • Patients assessed as being in an acute vulnerable situation where the planned intervention could negatively influence the situation e.g. having suicidal thoughts, or having such language difficulties that an interpreter is needed (which could complicate the understanding of the meaning of the intervention and cause unnecessary worries).

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Assessment of activity limitationAssessment of activity limitations, SDO and DOAAssessment and analysis of activity limitation by occupational therapist using 2 registered instruments (SDO and DOA).
Control group: treatment as usualControl groupAssessment of activity limitations according to usual routines
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Health care treatments6 months after inclusion

Differences in types of healthcare treatment options between intervention and control group. Comparisons will be made between intervention and control group with regard to registered codes for intervention and codes for professionals responsible for treatment options. Descriptive calculations and comparisons will be made on differences in types of as well as changes in treatment measures within the notified time frame.

Changes in sick leave patterns6 months after inclusion

Differences in number of sick leave periods, full-time or part-time or number of sick leave spells between intervention and control group.

Number of questions from the Social Insurance Agency (SIA)6 months after inclusion

Differences in number of clarifying questions from SIA between intervention and control group.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Participants self-assessed effects of being part of the project6 months after inclusion

Data is gathered by a structured questionnaire covering experiences of treatment, support, and effects on need for sick leave after inclusion. Differences in experiences between intervention and control group will be measured. Questions asked are constructed as multiple choice questions, on an ordinal scale, about being on prolonged sick leave, length of sick leave period, having returned to work or not. Questions are further asked about opinions on the effect of treatment on work ability, support for following steps in vocational rehabilitation and contact with other stakeholders within the work rehabilitation process. These latter questions are answered with a 5-point Likert scale, where 1 is "do not agree" and 5 is "fully agreeing".

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Göteborg University, Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology

🇸🇪

Göteborg, Sweden

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