The large number of people on long-term sick leave is a major public health concern in Norway. The main causes of disability are musculoskeletal and mental disorders. Long-term sick leave causes a decline in individual life-quality, is associated with increased risk for mental disorders and represents a very large cost for the Norwegian society. The purpose of this study is to determine whether the patients included return to work after rehabilitation at Hysnes Rehabilitation Centre. This includes an investigation of what is considered to be the effect of Return-to-work rehabilitation measured before, during and after the stay at the rehabilitation centre: The study specifically looks at the effect of structured and standardized return-to-work follow up of the patient, including contact with stakeholders (general practitioner, social security office and workplace). In addition there is a need to describe the patients participating in the program. The aetiology of complex symptom disorders is poorly understood and the role of genetics and stress is not translatable to a complex symptom population. This complicates the transition from current biological research to a clinical use regarding these patients. If the investigators can assist in understanding how these patients, who are multiusers of health care and have received sickness benefit for a long time, develop their disorders and symptoms, it will be of great importance to the Norwegian community. Therefore the study consists of multimodal measurements of the patients before, during and after a rehabilitation programme at Hysnes Rehabilitation Centre. These measures include genotype, saliva cortisol, medical-, psychological-, physiological diagnostics and work related factors. Related aims: Investigate if multidisciplinary treatment based on acceptance and commitment therapy, contributes to normalisation of cortisol release with regards to a standardized stress test. See wether individual differences regarding the stress profile can predict return to work in patients with complex symptom disorders. Investigate genetic risk factors in relation to Return to Work rehabilitation and identify treatment moderators in a multidisciplinary rehabilitation program.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
214
3 1/2 weeks of Return-to-work rehabilitation followed by 6 months of Return-to-work follow-up
3 1/2 weeks of Return-to-work rehabilitation followed by standard follow-up
Hysnes Helsefort, St Olavs Hospital
Trondheim, Norway
Return to work
Differences in cumulative days of sick leave, as reported by the government database "FD-Trygd".
Time frame: 1 year after the end of the stay at the rehabilitation center.
quality of life
Quality of life is assessed by 15D, SF8 and function subscale in SF-36
Time frame: 5 years after the end of the rehabilitation stay
Functional status
Functional status will be measured with elements from the Norwegian Function Assessment Scale (Osteras et al., 2007) and the function subscale of SF-36 (Ware Jr \& Sherbourne, 1992)
Time frame: 5 year after the end of the rehabilitation stay
level of symptoms (somatic and psychological)
The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) measure changes in anxiety and depression. Changes regarding physical and mental fatigue are registered through the Chalder Fatigue Questionnaire. Changes in participants subjective experience of pain measured by numerical rating scale (NRS)
Time frame: 5 year after the end of the rehabilitation stay,
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