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Early, specialist vocational rehabilitation to facilitate return to work after traumatic brain injury: the FRESH feasibility RCT

Early, specialist vocational rehabilitation to facilitate return to work after traumatic brain injury: the FRESH feasibility RCT
Early, specialist vocational rehabilitation to facilitate return to work after traumatic brain injury: the FRESH feasibility RCT

BACKGROUND: Up to 160,000 people incur traumatic brain injury (TBI) each year in the UK. TBI can have profound effects on many areas of human functioning, including participation in work. There is limited evidence of the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of vocational rehabilitation (VR) after injury to promote early return to work (RTW) following TBI.

OBJECTIVE: To assess the feasibility of a definitive, multicentre, randomised controlled trial (RCT) of the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of early, specialist VR plus usual care (UC) compared with UC alone on work retention 12 months post TBI.

DESIGN: A multicentre, feasibility, parallel-group RCT with a feasibility economic evaluation and an embedded mixed-methods process evaluation. Randomisation was by remote computer-generated allocation.

SETTING: Three NHS major trauma centres (MTCs) in England.

PARTICIPANTS: Adults with TBI admitted for > 48 hours and working or studying prior to injury.

INTERVENTIONS: Early specialist TBI VR delivered by occupational therapists (OTs) in the community using a case co-ordination model.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Self-reported RTW 12 months post randomisation, mood, functional ability, participation, work self-efficacy, quality of life and work ability. Feasibility outcomes included recruitment and retention rates. Follow-up was by postal questionnaires in two centres and face to face in one centre. Those collecting data were blind to treatment allocation.

RESULTS: Out of 102 target participants, 78 were recruited (39 randomised to each arm), representing 39% of those eligible and 5% of those screened. Approximately 2.2 patients were recruited per site per month. Of those, 56% had mild injuries, 18% had moderate injuries and 26% had severe injuries. A total of 32 out of 45 nominated carers were recruited. A total of 52 out of 78 (67%) TBI participants responded at 12 months (UC, n = 23; intervention, n = 29), completing 90% of the work questions; 21 out of 23 (91%) UC respondents and 20 out of 29 (69%) intervention participants returned to work at 12 months. Two participants disengaged from the intervention. Face-to-face follow-up was no more effective than postal follow-up. RTW was most strongly related to social participation and work self-efficacy. It is feasible to assess the cost-effectiveness of VR. Intervention was delivered as intended and valued by participants. Factors likely to affect a definitive trial include deploying experienced OTs, no clear TBI definition or TBI registers, and repatriation of more severe TBI from MTCs, affecting recruitment of those most likely to benefit/least likely to drop out.

LIMITATIONS: Target recruitment was not reached, but mechanisms to achieve this in future studies were identified. Retention was lower than expected, particularly in UC, potentially biasing estimates of the 12-month RTW rate.

CONCLUSIONS: This study met most feasibility objectives. The intervention was delivered with high fidelity. When objectives were not met, strategies to ensure feasibility of a full trial were identified. Future work should test two-stage recruitment and include resources to recruit from 'spokes'. A broader measure covering work ability, self-efficacy and participation may be a more sensitive outcome.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN38581822.

FUNDING: This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 22, No. 33. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.

Activities of Daily Living, Adolescent, Adult, Brain Injuries, Traumatic/rehabilitation, Cost-Benefit Analysis, England, Female, Health Resources/economics, Humans, Male, Mental Health, Middle Aged, Occupational Therapy/economics, Quality of Life, Rehabilitation, Vocational/economics, Research Design, Return to Work, Self Efficacy, Social Participation, Time Factors, Trauma Centers, Trauma Severity Indices, Young Adult
1366-5278
1-124
Radford, Kate
5838a2ae-07a9-4bfc-b3f1-b36fd6efe3f2
Sutton, Chris
3890014a-49ea-4c8c-906c-38d68f5e176b
Sach, Tracey
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Holmes, Jain
e4d14097-c72a-4a25-ae03-bdefecec9874
Watkins, Caroline
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Forshaw, Denise
ecea0b71-f6ea-47db-8dc9-2df9d1c5fc58
Jones, Trevor
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Hoffman, Karen
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O'Connor, Rory
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Tyerman, Ruth
33170231-5080-4cca-adb4-86f20556a6fe
Merchán-Baeza, Jose Antonio
a516f9a7-5c66-4716-8ec4-9d714b8d1112
Morris, Richard
09dc599c-6848-41f5-a170-7408d4128f05
McManus, Emma
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Drummond, Avril
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Walker, Marion
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Duley, Lelia
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Shakespeare, David
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Hammond, Alison
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Phillips, Julie
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Radford, Kate
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Sutton, Chris
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Sach, Tracey
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Holmes, Jain
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Watkins, Caroline
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Forshaw, Denise
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Jones, Trevor
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Hoffman, Karen
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O'Connor, Rory
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Tyerman, Ruth
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Merchán-Baeza, Jose Antonio
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Morris, Richard
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McManus, Emma
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Drummond, Avril
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Walker, Marion
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Duley, Lelia
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Shakespeare, David
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Hammond, Alison
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Phillips, Julie
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Radford, Kate, Sutton, Chris, Sach, Tracey, Holmes, Jain, Watkins, Caroline, Forshaw, Denise, Jones, Trevor, Hoffman, Karen, O'Connor, Rory, Tyerman, Ruth, Merchán-Baeza, Jose Antonio, Morris, Richard, McManus, Emma, Drummond, Avril, Walker, Marion, Duley, Lelia, Shakespeare, David, Hammond, Alison and Phillips, Julie (2018) Early, specialist vocational rehabilitation to facilitate return to work after traumatic brain injury: the FRESH feasibility RCT. Health technology assessment (Winchester, England), 22 (33), 1-124. (doi:10.3310/hta22330).

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Up to 160,000 people incur traumatic brain injury (TBI) each year in the UK. TBI can have profound effects on many areas of human functioning, including participation in work. There is limited evidence of the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of vocational rehabilitation (VR) after injury to promote early return to work (RTW) following TBI.

OBJECTIVE: To assess the feasibility of a definitive, multicentre, randomised controlled trial (RCT) of the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of early, specialist VR plus usual care (UC) compared with UC alone on work retention 12 months post TBI.

DESIGN: A multicentre, feasibility, parallel-group RCT with a feasibility economic evaluation and an embedded mixed-methods process evaluation. Randomisation was by remote computer-generated allocation.

SETTING: Three NHS major trauma centres (MTCs) in England.

PARTICIPANTS: Adults with TBI admitted for > 48 hours and working or studying prior to injury.

INTERVENTIONS: Early specialist TBI VR delivered by occupational therapists (OTs) in the community using a case co-ordination model.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Self-reported RTW 12 months post randomisation, mood, functional ability, participation, work self-efficacy, quality of life and work ability. Feasibility outcomes included recruitment and retention rates. Follow-up was by postal questionnaires in two centres and face to face in one centre. Those collecting data were blind to treatment allocation.

RESULTS: Out of 102 target participants, 78 were recruited (39 randomised to each arm), representing 39% of those eligible and 5% of those screened. Approximately 2.2 patients were recruited per site per month. Of those, 56% had mild injuries, 18% had moderate injuries and 26% had severe injuries. A total of 32 out of 45 nominated carers were recruited. A total of 52 out of 78 (67%) TBI participants responded at 12 months (UC, n = 23; intervention, n = 29), completing 90% of the work questions; 21 out of 23 (91%) UC respondents and 20 out of 29 (69%) intervention participants returned to work at 12 months. Two participants disengaged from the intervention. Face-to-face follow-up was no more effective than postal follow-up. RTW was most strongly related to social participation and work self-efficacy. It is feasible to assess the cost-effectiveness of VR. Intervention was delivered as intended and valued by participants. Factors likely to affect a definitive trial include deploying experienced OTs, no clear TBI definition or TBI registers, and repatriation of more severe TBI from MTCs, affecting recruitment of those most likely to benefit/least likely to drop out.

LIMITATIONS: Target recruitment was not reached, but mechanisms to achieve this in future studies were identified. Retention was lower than expected, particularly in UC, potentially biasing estimates of the 12-month RTW rate.

CONCLUSIONS: This study met most feasibility objectives. The intervention was delivered with high fidelity. When objectives were not met, strategies to ensure feasibility of a full trial were identified. Future work should test two-stage recruitment and include resources to recruit from 'spokes'. A broader measure covering work ability, self-efficacy and participation may be a more sensitive outcome.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN38581822.

FUNDING: This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 22, No. 33. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 1 May 2018
Keywords: Activities of Daily Living, Adolescent, Adult, Brain Injuries, Traumatic/rehabilitation, Cost-Benefit Analysis, England, Female, Health Resources/economics, Humans, Male, Mental Health, Middle Aged, Occupational Therapy/economics, Quality of Life, Rehabilitation, Vocational/economics, Research Design, Return to Work, Self Efficacy, Social Participation, Time Factors, Trauma Centers, Trauma Severity Indices, Young Adult

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 480708
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480708
ISSN: 1366-5278
PURE UUID: faadf1e9-b594-4437-9a75-d1b6fcfd2de5
ORCID for Tracey Sach: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8098-9220

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Date deposited: 08 Aug 2023 16:53
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:20

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Contributors

Author: Kate Radford
Author: Chris Sutton
Author: Tracey Sach ORCID iD
Author: Jain Holmes
Author: Caroline Watkins
Author: Denise Forshaw
Author: Trevor Jones
Author: Karen Hoffman
Author: Rory O'Connor
Author: Ruth Tyerman
Author: Jose Antonio Merchán-Baeza
Author: Richard Morris
Author: Emma McManus
Author: Avril Drummond
Author: Marion Walker
Author: Lelia Duley
Author: David Shakespeare
Author: Alison Hammond
Author: Julie Phillips

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