Morrisroe Kathleen, Sudararajan Vijaya, Stevens Wendy, Sahhar Joanne, Zochling Jane, Roddy Janet, Proudman Susanna, Nikpour Mandana
Department of Medicine, University of Melbourne at St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne.
Department of Rheumatology St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne, Melbourne.
Rheumatology (Oxford). 2018 Jan 1;57(1):73-83. doi: 10.1093/rheumatology/kex362.
To evaluate work productivity and its economic burden in SSc patients.
Consecutive SSc patients enrolled in the Australian Scleroderma Cohort Study were mailed questionnaires assessing employment (Workers' Productivity and Activity Impairment Questionnaire and a custom-made questionnaire) and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) (36-item Short Form Health Survey and Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System 29). Linear regression methods were used to determine factors associated with work productivity.
Among 476 patients submitting responses, 55.2% <65 years of age were employed. Unemployed patients were older at the time of survey completion (57.1 vs 53.7 years; P < 0.001) and had longer disease duration from first SSc clinical manifestation (16.2 vs 14.9 years; P = 0.01) than employed patients. The mean age at unemployment onset was 13.2 years below the average Australian retirement age. Of those working in the week prior to completing the survey, 16.0% reported missing work (absenteeism) due to their SSc, accounting for 32.9% of their working week. Reduced productivity while at work (presenteeism) accounted for 22% of their working week. Annual costs per patient as a consequence of unemployment and reduced productivity equated to a total of AUD$67 595.40. Factors independently associated with reduced work productivity were presence of synovitis and sicca symptoms, while tertiary education protected against work impairment. Patients with low HRQoL scores also had low work productivity.
SSc is associated with considerable unemployment and reduced productivity, which in turn is associated with a substantial economic burden and poor HRQoL. Raising awareness and identifying modifiable factors are possible ways of reducing this burden.
评估系统性硬化症(SSc)患者的工作效率及其经济负担。
向参加澳大利亚硬皮病队列研究的连续性SSc患者邮寄问卷,评估就业情况(工作效率和活动障碍问卷以及一份定制问卷)和健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)(36项简短健康调查问卷和患者报告结局测量信息系统29)。采用线性回归方法确定与工作效率相关的因素。
在476名提交回复的患者中,55.2%年龄<65岁的患者有工作。与有工作的患者相比,失业患者在完成调查时年龄更大(57.1岁对53.7岁;P<0.001),从首次出现SSc临床表现起的病程更长(16.2年对14.9年;P = 0.01)。失业开始时的平均年龄比澳大利亚平均退休年龄低13.2岁。在完成调查前一周仍在工作的患者中,16.0%报告因SSc而缺勤,占其工作周的32.9%。工作时生产力下降(出勤主义)占其工作周的22%。由于失业和生产力下降,每位患者每年的成本总计达67595.40澳元。与工作效率降低独立相关的因素是滑膜炎和干燥症状的存在,而高等教育可防止工作受损。HRQoL得分低的患者工作效率也低。
SSc与大量失业和生产力下降相关,这反过来又与巨大的经济负担和较差的HRQoL相关。提高认识和识别可改变的因素是减轻这种负担的可能途径。