Increased pain tolerance as an indicator of return to work in low-back injuries after work hardening

Department

Physical Therapy

Abstract

Objective. This study examined retrospective data from a multidisciplinary work-hardening program that compared patients who did and did not return to work after low-back injury. The objective of this study was to identify differences between these groups to better guide work-hardening programs and return-to-work decisions. Method. Retrospective data from patients with low-back injuries (n = 115) who participated in a northern California work-hardening program were analyzed. Using two-way analysis of variance, male and female patients who did and did not return to work were compared. Results. No significant differences were found between men and women for any of the variables studied. Patients who did and did not return to work were not significantly different in age, length of injury, and subjective pain at the beginning or end of the work-hardening program or in activity tolerance (p = .08). Patients who returned to work perceived a significantly (p ≤ .05) greater improvement in pain tolerance by the end of the work-hardening program than those who did not return to work. Conclusion. The results of this study suggest that rehabilitation emphasis should not be placed on the reduction of subjective pain but, rather, on strategies to cope with existing pain while improving functional ability.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2001

Publication Title

American Journal of Occupational Therapy

ISSN

0272-9490

Volume

55

Issue

2

DOI

10.5014/ajot.55.2.200

First Page

200

Last Page

205

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