Carriere J S, Thibault P, Adams H, Milioto M, Ditto B, Sullivan M J L
Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Faculty of Health and Behavioural Sciences, University of Queensland, Herston, Qld, Australia.
Eur J Pain. 2017 Aug;21(7):1234-1242. doi: 10.1002/ejp.1023. Epub 2017 May 11.
Emerging evidence suggests that perceived injustice is a risk factor for work disability in individuals with whiplash injury. At present, however, little is known about the processes by which perceived injustice impacts on return to work. The purpose of this study was to examine whether expectancies mediated the relationship between perceived injustice and return to work in patients with whiplash injury.
One hundred and fifty-two individuals (81 men, 71 women) with a primary diagnosis of whiplash injury completed self-report measures of pain intensity, perceived injustice and return-to-work expectancies following admission to a rehabilitation programme. Work status was assessed 1 year after discharge.
Consistent with previous research, high scores on a measure of perceived injustice were associated with prolonged work disability. Results indicated that high perceptions of injustice were associated with low return-to-work expectancies. Causal mediation analyses revealed that expectancies fully mediated the relationship between perceived injustice and return to work.
The findings suggest that intervention techniques designed to target expectancies could improve return-to-work outcomes in patients with whiplash injury. Discussion addresses the processes by which expectancies might impact on return-to-work outcomes and the manner in which negative return-to-work expectancies might be modified through intervention.
The study confirms that expectancies are the mechanism through which perceived injustice impacts return to work following whiplash injury. The findings suggest that interventions designed to specifically target return-to-work expectancies might improve rehabilitation outcomes in patients with whiplash injury.
新出现的证据表明,感知到的不公正感是挥鞭伤患者工作能力丧失的一个风险因素。然而,目前对于感知到的不公正感影响重返工作岗位的过程知之甚少。本研究的目的是检验期望是否在挥鞭伤患者感知到的不公正感与重返工作岗位之间的关系中起中介作用。
152名初步诊断为挥鞭伤的个体(81名男性,71名女性)在进入康复项目后完成了关于疼痛强度、感知到的不公正感和重返工作岗位期望的自我报告测量。出院1年后评估工作状态。
与之前的研究一致,感知到的不公正感测量得分高与工作能力丧失时间延长相关。结果表明,对不公正感的高度感知与低重返工作岗位期望相关。因果中介分析显示,期望完全中介了感知到的不公正感与重返工作岗位之间的关系。
研究结果表明,旨在针对期望的干预技术可能会改善挥鞭伤患者的重返工作岗位结果。讨论涉及期望可能影响重返工作岗位结果的过程,以及如何通过干预改变消极的重返工作岗位期望。
该研究证实,期望是感知到的不公正感影响挥鞭伤后重返工作岗位的机制。研究结果表明,专门针对重返工作岗位期望的干预措施可能会改善挥鞭伤患者的康复结果。