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Work-Related Factors Considered by Sickness-Absent Employees When Estimating Timeframes for Returning to Work
by
Young, Amanda E.
, Choi, YoonSun
in
Activities of daily living
/ Adult
/ Analysis
/ Back pain
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Content analysis
/ Disability management
/ Employees
/ Employment
/ Engineering and Technology
/ Estimation
/ Female
/ Focus Groups
/ Handbooks
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Middle Aged
/ Musculoskeletal Diseases - economics
/ People and Places
/ Qualitative research
/ Research methodology
/ Researchers
/ Retraining
/ Return to Work
/ Sick Leave
/ Social Sciences
/ Studies
/ Systematic review
/ Vocational rehabilitation
/ Workers
/ Workplace
2016
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Work-Related Factors Considered by Sickness-Absent Employees When Estimating Timeframes for Returning to Work
by
Young, Amanda E.
, Choi, YoonSun
in
Activities of daily living
/ Adult
/ Analysis
/ Back pain
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Content analysis
/ Disability management
/ Employees
/ Employment
/ Engineering and Technology
/ Estimation
/ Female
/ Focus Groups
/ Handbooks
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Middle Aged
/ Musculoskeletal Diseases - economics
/ People and Places
/ Qualitative research
/ Research methodology
/ Researchers
/ Retraining
/ Return to Work
/ Sick Leave
/ Social Sciences
/ Studies
/ Systematic review
/ Vocational rehabilitation
/ Workers
/ Workplace
2016
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Work-Related Factors Considered by Sickness-Absent Employees When Estimating Timeframes for Returning to Work
by
Young, Amanda E.
, Choi, YoonSun
in
Activities of daily living
/ Adult
/ Analysis
/ Back pain
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Content analysis
/ Disability management
/ Employees
/ Employment
/ Engineering and Technology
/ Estimation
/ Female
/ Focus Groups
/ Handbooks
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Middle Aged
/ Musculoskeletal Diseases - economics
/ People and Places
/ Qualitative research
/ Research methodology
/ Researchers
/ Retraining
/ Return to Work
/ Sick Leave
/ Social Sciences
/ Studies
/ Systematic review
/ Vocational rehabilitation
/ Workers
/ Workplace
2016
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Work-Related Factors Considered by Sickness-Absent Employees When Estimating Timeframes for Returning to Work
Journal Article
Work-Related Factors Considered by Sickness-Absent Employees When Estimating Timeframes for Returning to Work
2016
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Overview
Work-related factors have been found to be influential in shaping a number of return-to-work outcomes including return-to-work expectations. Based on the idea that work-related factors have the potential for modification through workplace-based initiatives, this study involved a detailed examination of work-related factors referenced by workers as being taken into consideration when estimating timeframes for returning to work.
Focus groups were conducted with 30 employees, currently off work (≤ 3 months) due to a musculoskeletal condition. During the focus groups, participants wrote and spoke about the factors that they considered when forming their expectations for returning to work. Data were subjected to thematic content analysis.
Discussions revealed that participants' considerations tended to differ depending on whether or not they had a job to return to. Those with jobs (n = 23) referenced specific influences such as working relationships, accommodations, physical and practical limitations, as well as concerns about their ability to do their job. Those without a job to return to (n = 7) talked about the ways they would go about finding work, and how long they thought this would take. Both groups mentioned the influence of wanting to find the \"right\" job, retraining and being limited due to the need for income.
Findings indicate that employees reference numerous work-related factors when estimating their timeframes for returning to work, and that many of these have been previously identified as relating to other return-to-work outcomes. Findings suggest the potential to improve return-to-work expectation through addressing work-related influences, and helping people work through the tasks they need to complete in order to move forward in the return-to-work process.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
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