Return to work after traumatic brain injury: cohort comparison and economic evaluation
Return to work after traumatic brain injury: cohort comparison and economic evaluation
Background: returning to work (RTW) in the UK is problematic following TBI. Vocational rehabilitation (VR) is limited and efficacy or costs seldom reported. This study aimed to determine whether a TBI specialist VR intervention (TBI VR) was more effective at work return and retention 12 months after injury than usual care (UC). Secondary aims were to explore the feasibility of collecting economic data to inform a definitive trial.
Method: work outcomes of TBI-VR were compared to UC. Ninety-four participants (40 TBI-VR) with TBI resulting in hospitalization ≥48 hours, who were working at injury were followed up by postal questionnaire at 3, 6 and 12 months post-hospital discharge. Primary outcome was RTW. Secondary outcomes were functional ability, mood and quality-of-life. Health resource use was measured by self-report.
Results: at 12 months, 15% more TBI-VR participants (27% more with moderate/severe TBI) were working than UC (27/36, 75% vs. 27/45, 60%). Mean TBI-VR health costs per person (consultant, GP, therapy, medication) were only £75 greater at 1 year. Secondary outcomes showed no significant baseline differences between groups.
Discussion: more TBI-VR participants returned to work than UC. People with moderate/severe TBI benefitted most. This positive trend was achieved without greatly increased health costs, suggesting cost-effectiveness. This study justifies the need for and can inform a definitive Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT).
adaptation, psychological, adult, anxiety/rehabilitation, brain injuries/economics, cost-benefit analysis, depression/rehabilitation, emotions, employment, feasibility studies, female, hospitalization, humans, male, pilot projects, prospective studies, quality of life, recovery of function, rehabilitation, vocational/economics, return to work/economics, surveys and questionnaires, United Kingdom/epidemiology
507-520
Radford, Kate
5838a2ae-07a9-4bfc-b3f1-b36fd6efe3f2
Phillips, Julie
c4f9a44d-7e83-4fb3-a8a8-8db20dede7c1
Drummond, Avril
559a0644-290a-4fcf-9781-0174f2553a8d
Sach, Tracey
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Walker, Marion
5beae64c-40b3-4a9b-a67f-b5fb293235a3
Tyerman, Andy
c8fabed4-4659-4f64-b205-62fe55402f71
Haboubi, Naseer
61503e78-69a7-4fc3-a149-82a93fdbf905
Jones, Trevor
f1a66956-a543-4392-a212-7de88853ce84
Radford, Kate
5838a2ae-07a9-4bfc-b3f1-b36fd6efe3f2
Phillips, Julie
c4f9a44d-7e83-4fb3-a8a8-8db20dede7c1
Drummond, Avril
559a0644-290a-4fcf-9781-0174f2553a8d
Sach, Tracey
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Walker, Marion
5beae64c-40b3-4a9b-a67f-b5fb293235a3
Tyerman, Andy
c8fabed4-4659-4f64-b205-62fe55402f71
Haboubi, Naseer
61503e78-69a7-4fc3-a149-82a93fdbf905
Jones, Trevor
f1a66956-a543-4392-a212-7de88853ce84
Radford, Kate, Phillips, Julie, Drummond, Avril, Sach, Tracey, Walker, Marion, Tyerman, Andy, Haboubi, Naseer and Jones, Trevor
(2013)
Return to work after traumatic brain injury: cohort comparison and economic evaluation.
Brain Injury, 27 (5), .
(doi:10.3109/02699052.2013.766929).
Abstract
Background: returning to work (RTW) in the UK is problematic following TBI. Vocational rehabilitation (VR) is limited and efficacy or costs seldom reported. This study aimed to determine whether a TBI specialist VR intervention (TBI VR) was more effective at work return and retention 12 months after injury than usual care (UC). Secondary aims were to explore the feasibility of collecting economic data to inform a definitive trial.
Method: work outcomes of TBI-VR were compared to UC. Ninety-four participants (40 TBI-VR) with TBI resulting in hospitalization ≥48 hours, who were working at injury were followed up by postal questionnaire at 3, 6 and 12 months post-hospital discharge. Primary outcome was RTW. Secondary outcomes were functional ability, mood and quality-of-life. Health resource use was measured by self-report.
Results: at 12 months, 15% more TBI-VR participants (27% more with moderate/severe TBI) were working than UC (27/36, 75% vs. 27/45, 60%). Mean TBI-VR health costs per person (consultant, GP, therapy, medication) were only £75 greater at 1 year. Secondary outcomes showed no significant baseline differences between groups.
Discussion: more TBI-VR participants returned to work than UC. People with moderate/severe TBI benefitted most. This positive trend was achieved without greatly increased health costs, suggesting cost-effectiveness. This study justifies the need for and can inform a definitive Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT).
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 8 March 2013
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 March 2013
Keywords:
adaptation, psychological, adult, anxiety/rehabilitation, brain injuries/economics, cost-benefit analysis, depression/rehabilitation, emotions, employment, feasibility studies, female, hospitalization, humans, male, pilot projects, prospective studies, quality of life, recovery of function, rehabilitation, vocational/economics, return to work/economics, surveys and questionnaires, United Kingdom/epidemiology
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 478171
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478171
ISSN: 0269-9052
PURE UUID: 8626794b-f48b-417d-9966-05c4a1ddab24
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Date deposited: 23 Jun 2023 17:00
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:19
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Author:
Kate Radford
Author:
Julie Phillips
Author:
Avril Drummond
Author:
Tracey Sach
Author:
Marion Walker
Author:
Andy Tyerman
Author:
Naseer Haboubi
Author:
Trevor Jones
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