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Journal ArticleDOI

Return to work after rehabilitation in chronic low back pain workers. Does the interprofessional collaboration work

TLDR
The study found poor interest about work environment and that the cooperation between practitioners in disability management remains limited and the various practitioners’ cultures and interests may be a brake on cooperation and exchange of information.
Abstract
The objective of this study was to assess the workplace information collected and shared between professionals of the centers and occupational health professionals during functional restoration programs intended to chronic low back pain patients. A descriptive study carried out by a questionnaire sent to the French rehabilitation centers offering a functional restoration program. Data collection focused on the kinds of professionals involved in programs, professionals who approach work issues, work analysis, social and occupational information collected, existence of a specific work rehabilitation program, frequency of and methods for sharing information with occupational health professionals. Occupational information was mostly collected at inclusion during an individual interview by the rehabilitation physicians, social workers, and occupational therapists. Workplace environment was the most poorly discussed aspect. A minority of centers adapted their programs regarding these information. Information sharing with occupational physicians was mostly through the patient and was influenced by the presence of an ergonomist or of an occupational physician in the team. The study found poor interest about work environment and that the cooperation between practitioners in disability management remains limited. The various practitioners' cultures and interests may be a brake on cooperation and exchange of information.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Work Interventions Within Interdisciplinary Pain Rehabilitation Programs (IPRP) – Frequency, Patient Characteristics, and Association with Self-Rated Work Ability

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors explored the association between participation in work interventions and change in patients' self-rated work ability after IPRP and found that the most frequently used work intervention, the return-to-work (RTW) plan, had the strongest association with change in patient's work ability.
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Activité physique et réentraînement à l’effort chez les patients lombalgiques

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a model of the lombalgie chronique, a set of facteurs which rendent sa prise en charge complexe, not only in terms of its complexity but also in terms d'incapacite fonctionnelle et d'intensite de la douleur alors que les effets concernant l'absenteisme and le retour au travail sont plus heterogenes.
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Influence of low back pain characteristics on the healthcare procedures prescribed by general practitioners for adult patients: ancillary analysis of the French ECOGEN study

TL;DR: In this article , the authors conducted an ancillary analysis of an observational, cross-sectional study (ECOGEN) conducted between November 2011 and April 2012 among 128 general practitioners.
References
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Occupational health guidelines for the management of low back pain at work – evidence review

TL;DR: A systematic review of the literature to inform the development of occupational health guidelines for the management of low back pain at work is presented in this article, where the strongest evidence suggests that generally the physical demands at work have only a modest influence on the incidence of LBP or permanent spinal damage; preventive strategies based on the injury model do not reduce LBP, individual and work-related psychosocial factors play an important role in persisting symptoms and work loss; the management approach should be 'active' (including early work return); the combination of clinical, rehabilitation and organisational interventions
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Occupational health guidelines for the management of low back pain at work: evidence review.

TL;DR: There is increasing demand for evidence-based health care, and back pain is one of the most common and difficult occupational health problems, but there has been no readily available evidence base or guidance on management.
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A scoping review to improve conceptual clarity of interprofessional interventions

TL;DR: A scoping review of the interprofessional field was undertaken to map the literature available in order to identify key concepts, theories and sources of evidence and develop a theoretically based and empirically tested understanding of IPE and IPC.
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Multidisciplinary rehabilitation for subacute low back pain: graded activity or workplace intervention or both?: a randomized controlled trial

TL;DR: Workplace intervention is advised for multidisciplinary rehabilitation of subacute LBP and graded activity or combined intervention is not advised.
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Ineffective disability management by doctors is an obstacle for return-to-work: a cohort study on low back pain patients sicklisted for 3-4 months

TL;DR: Medical management of treating physicians is often an obstacle for return to work regarding low back pain patients sicklisted for 3–4 months, in the opinion of OPs, and communication between OPs and the treating physicians in disability management of these patients is limited.