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Journal article

Insurance-based case management to reintegrate patients on sick leave: systematic review and meta-analysis

Abstract

Work disability due to accident or illness results in considerable socioeconomic burden. Case management (CM) with individually tailored return-to-work (RTW) plans promise improved reintegration into the work force. We conducted a meta-analysis to determine the impact of CM on RTW. We conducted a search of 5 electronic databases for trials an insurance or similar setting that enrolled patients on sick leave for >4 weeks and randomised them to CM or a control group. Outcomes were time-to-RTW/lasting RTW/cumulative sickness absence. Two investigators performed quality assessment and data extraction independently and in duplicate. From 2200 records, we identified 9 studies from 7 countries including patients with musculoskeletal complaints (n=6), injuries (n=1), unspecific pain (n=1) and mental disorders (n=1) in an insurance (n=5) or insurance-like (n=4) setting. Sick-leave varied from 1–55 months. Risk of bias was moderate to high in most studies. Pooling of 5 studies reporting “time-to-RTW” showed a HR of 1.69 (95% CI: 1.38 to 2.07; heterogeneity: I2=0%) favouring CM. Two studies reported cumulative sickness absence after 12 months: OR of 2.5 (95% CI: 1.2 to 5.1) and shortening of 42 days (95% CI: 6 to 79; 34%) favouring CM. One study found no difference. The relevant benefit of CM for RTW compared to usual care was consistent across intervention and control conditions. Limited methodological quality, ambiguous definitions for “successful” RTW and lack of important details for transfer into practice (eg, precise description of intervention) require cautious interpretation. Evidence about CM on lasting RTW is promising, but remains limited.

Authors

Schandelmaier S; Burkhardt A; Ebrahim S; deBoer W; Guyatt G; Busse J; Kunz R; Zumbrunn T

Journal

Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Vol. 68, No. Suppl 1,

Publisher

BMJ

Publication Date

September 1, 2011

DOI

10.1136/oemed-2011-100382.89

ISSN

1351-0711

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