Patient Perspectives on Key Outcomes for Vocational Rehabilitation Interventions Following Traumatic Injury
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants and Materials
2.2. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Theme 1: Physical and Psychological Recovery and Purposeful Life Engagement
3.1.1. Physical Recovery
“…my brain wasn’t really processing what had actually happened because I was so concentrating on like right, you’ve got to learn to walk again” (amputation, female, twenties)
“…I had goals that the physio team had put me and I wanted to break the goals. I wanted to beat them a week earlier, a day earlier. And I went for it really…” (polytrauma, male, forties)
3.1.2. Psychological Recovery
“It was a very difficult period of time, you get—mentally it’s difficult to get through it, never mind the physical and what you’re going through, mentally it’s a difficult time.” (pelvic fracture, female, fifties)
“My brain went from doing nothing to being a 100 mph in the space of a morning. It was just like, oh… it just adds to a level of stress that I didn’t need.” (lower limb, male, thirties)
“I felt I was a prisoner. I got up in the morning, I was a prisoner in the house.” (lower limb fracture, female, sixties)
“I think through the psychological support sussing out what the most pressing issue is, what’s causing the anxiety, and then trying to find a service or a network of people.” (spinal cord injury, female, forties)
“Seek out clinical psychology. I’d make that your number-one goal without a shadow of a doubt… I’d say, don’t go back until you’re mentally ready for it. I think that’s the main thing.” (polytrauma, male, forties)
“Anxious first, and that made me isolate myself, and then the isolation caused the depression. I can see that as a pattern.” (spinal cord injury, female, forties)
“When it comes to the anniversary of the accident, (…) You know, you have weird flashbacks.” (amputation, female, twenties)
3.1.3. Purposeful Life Engagement as Part of Recovery
“I think it’s important to try to get back to work if you can, because it clearly gives you a sense of purpose in your life, which you may feel yourself to be useless… I think it is important to feel you have some use, not just to yourself but to those in society.” (spinal cord injury, male, sixties)
“But still there’s some steps towards getting a worthwhile, feeling satisfied with yourself and that you’re fulfilled.” (polytrauma including traumatic brain injury, male, forties)
“…Once I got reasonably comfortable with myself, I started off my endeavour back to work, it wasn’t a planned thing, but I wanted to give myself something to do, I was, a purpose in life as people say, and it started off for me volunteering.” (polytrauma including traumatic brain injury, male, forties)
“I’m worrying that I’m not smart enough for this but I feel I need a job even for independence and becoming a normal person again… there was just a coffee shop near my mum and my dad and there was a sign, looking for staff, so I went in.” (polytrauma, female, thirties)
3.2. Theme 2: Understanding of Normality and Managing Expectations
3.2.1. Returning to Normal
“I’m very driven by my work, so for me, it was about finding normality again…I’ve heard a lot about the importance of routine and when you’re back into your normal routine, how that can kind of benefit you psychologically.” (amputation, female, twenties)
“…The difficult thing is… you’re dependent on everybody when you did everything for yourself.” (lower limb fracture, female, sixties)
“So, getting all of it back and feeling like I was back to being independent, yeah.” (lower limb fracture, female, thirties)
“…I knew once I was able to start going swimming and doing a bit more bike riding, I would be all right to stand at work” (lower limb fracture, female, sixties)
“…You could, of course, go back to work before you start doing things like walking the dog, because working is essential and walking the dog is non-essential. But for me, independence did involve that because otherwise, I was putting this burden on my partner and frustratingly, I think, returning to work meant that it was longer before I could start doing things like walking the dog because if I worked on Tuesday I was ruined on a Wednesday.” (lower limb fracture, female, thirties)
3.2.2. Managing Recovery Expectations
“I wasn’t very patient. I wanted to not feel anxious in the morning, to not feel depressed in the morning, to have no further bladder infections in the morning. So, I wanted everything to be fixed, and it doesn’t work like that.” (spinal cord injury, female, forties)
“She [nurse] was brilliant. She told me, and it did happen like that. I was like, ‘All right then.’ This, this and this, and this could happen. Well it did happen, so I thought that’s really, really good.” (pelvic fracture, female, fifties)
3.3. Theme 3. Managing Return to Work and Employer Expectations
3.3.1. Managing Participants’ Return to Work Expectations
“If the employer is in a position to keep a job open, to just give them an outline of, maybe, timescales. You know, they’re not off sick because they want to be off sick. Whatever the trauma is, whatever the disability is, it’s a major life-changing event. It’s not just a case of, right, she or he is out of hospital, so therefore, why aren’t they back at work?” (spinal cord injury, female, forties)
“I think for lots of people it is, ‘I need to get back to work’. Sometimes it’s the first or second thing they might say, how long did it take you? We’re all different, but I need to get back to work.” (pelvic fracture, female, fifties)
“…As long as you’re prepared to go back to exactly how you were before, and I don’t think I was. I think I should have taken on some reduced duties or something first. That was my choice. They offered that and I said I’d be fine and then it turned out pretty bad for me.” (lower limb, male, thirties)
3.3.2. Workplace Understanding Impact of Injury, Including Invisible Impacts
“…Especially for newly injured people, I think that your team leader, and maybe a few people on the team that you work in, should be educated a little bit about spinal cord injury, because then there are people, even if it’s not the whole team, looking out for you, looking out for those signs. Maybe you could say, right, there are three people that you can just say, ‘I’m really struggling today,’ …liaising with the employers, potentially liaising with chosen colleagues—because you don’t want everyone knowing your business, but a select few people that can sort of look out for you.” (spinal cord injury, female, forties)
“…Having someone coming to see you at the workplace, and having a chat to your manager about what you might need…I had a really good experience in terms of my management, I do know of some organisations in where the line managers are new, fresh to post, wanting to make a difference, and actually see absence from work as a black mark against them, as not motivated, rather than thinking about the individual’s needs.” (upper limb fracture, female, sixties)
3.3.3. Successfully Managing Individual Expectations and Options Available
“It’s like getting somebody into work, it should be personal to them, it should be focussed on what their goals are, how soon they want to get back, and what getting back to work looks like for them… Some people might see getting back on a phased return within three months a success, and other people like me will see getting back as soon as possible full-time with as little disruption to your life as a success… I think make it patient-focussed and understanding what the needs of each individual are and tailoring it to them.” (lower limb fracture, male, thirties)
“So meaningful baby steps that, because you know, going back to work in your old job feels a million miles off, you just can’t do that, there’s no way, I’m never going to be asked. Whereas if I can set some goals that are achievable, you know baby steps is the way as far as I’m concerned.” (polytrauma including traumatic brain injury, male, forties)
4. Discussion
4.1. Main Findings
4.2. Comparison to Prior Research and Theory
4.3. Strengths and Limitations
4.4. Implications for Research
4.5. Implications for Practice
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Participant Characteristic (n = 17) | Number/Range |
---|---|
Age | 27–68 years (mean 44) |
Gender | Female (n = 10); Male (n = 7) |
Injury type | Amputation n = 1 Lower limb injury n = 5 Pelvic injury n = 2 Polytrauma n = 3 Polytrauma + TBI n = 1 Spinal cord injury n = 2 TBI n = 2 - Upper limb injury n = 1 |
Time since injury | 6 months to 14 years |
Ethnicity | White British (n = 15); Asian (n = 1); Black British (n = 1) |
Employed status at time of injury | Employed (n = 11); Self-employed (n = 4); Student (n = 2) |
Pre-injury employment type/sector | - Administrator (n = 1) - Animal care (n = 1) - Council Planning Officer (n = 1) - Finance consultant (n = 1) - Housing officer (n = 1) - IT (n = 2) - Journalist (n = 1) - Higher education (n = 1) - Nurse (n = 1) - Photographer (n = 1) - Probation Officer (n = 1) - Student (n = 2) - Surveyor (n = 2) - Taxi driver (n = 1) |
Employment status following injury | Returned to work (n = 12) Returned to education (n = 2) Not returned to work (n = 3) |
Vocational rehabilitation | Received VR (n = 3); Did not receive VR (n = 14) |
Theme | Subthemes |
---|---|
1. Physical and psychological recovery | 1.1. Physical recovery |
1.2. Psychological recovery | |
1.3. Purposeful life engagement as part of recovery | |
2. Understanding of normality and managing expectations | 2.1. Returning to normal |
2.2. Recovery expectations | |
3. Managing work and employer expectations | 3.1. Managing the survivors’ return to work expectations |
3.2. Workplace understanding impact of injury, including invisible impacts | |
3.3. Successfully managing expectations |
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Bridger, K.; Kellezi, B.; Kendrick, D.; Radford, K.; Timmons, S.; Rennoldson, M.; Jones, T.; Kettlewell, J.; on behalf of the ROWTATE Team. Patient Perspectives on Key Outcomes for Vocational Rehabilitation Interventions Following Traumatic Injury. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 2035. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18042035
Bridger K, Kellezi B, Kendrick D, Radford K, Timmons S, Rennoldson M, Jones T, Kettlewell J, on behalf of the ROWTATE Team. Patient Perspectives on Key Outcomes for Vocational Rehabilitation Interventions Following Traumatic Injury. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(4):2035. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18042035
Chicago/Turabian StyleBridger, Kay, Blerina Kellezi, Denise Kendrick, Kate Radford, Stephen Timmons, Mike Rennoldson, Trevor Jones, Jade Kettlewell, and on behalf of the ROWTATE Team. 2021. "Patient Perspectives on Key Outcomes for Vocational Rehabilitation Interventions Following Traumatic Injury" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 4: 2035. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18042035
APA StyleBridger, K., Kellezi, B., Kendrick, D., Radford, K., Timmons, S., Rennoldson, M., Jones, T., Kettlewell, J., & on behalf of the ROWTATE Team. (2021). Patient Perspectives on Key Outcomes for Vocational Rehabilitation Interventions Following Traumatic Injury. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(4), 2035. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18042035