Cao Christopher, Halegoua-DeMarzio Dina, Guirguis Shady, Chen Crystal, Fenkel Jonathan M, Herrine Steven
Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
J Clin Transl Hepatol. 2020 Sep 28;8(3):299-303. doi: 10.14218/JCTH.2020.00010. Epub 2020 Jul 14.
This study serves to revisit the effects of liver transplantation (LT) on employment in an era of improving survival outcomes post-transplant, and to identify areas of improvement in the transplant process to better optimize post-LT employment and patient satisfaction. Prospectively, patients who had undergone LT at a single tertiary LT center were surveyed in person and by e-mail. Primary outcomes included employment rate pre- and post-LT, annual salary, weekly hours worked, barriers to re-employment, and patient satisfaction. Responses were collected and analyzed from 121 patients who underwent LT. Pre-LT, 68 (56.1%) reported full-time employment, 13 (10.7%) part-time employment, and 40 (33.1%) unemployment. Post-LT, 26 (21.4%) reported continued full-time employment, 18 (14.9%) part-time employment, and 77 (63.6%) unemployment. Average weekly work hours decreased post-LT (16.1 h/week vs. 39.9 h/week). Mean annual salaries decreased post-LT (17 earning salary ≥$40,000 vs. 56 earning salary ≥$40,000). These outcomes differed from patient pre-LT expectations, with 81.0% of previously employed patients believing they would return to employment, resulting in decreased patient satisfaction. Patients working physically demanding jobs pre-LT were less likely to return to work. Reasons cited for lack of return to full employment included early fatigue and difficulty regaining physical strength. Re-employment rates remain low post-LT, which is particularly true for patients working physically active jobs. Fatigue is a significant barrier to re-employment and increased physical rehabilitation post-LT may prove to be beneficial. Patients should be given realistic expectations about return to employment prior to their LT.
本研究旨在重新审视肝移植(LT)在移植后生存结果改善时代对就业的影响,并确定移植过程中的改进领域,以更好地优化肝移植后的就业情况和患者满意度。前瞻性地,对在单一三级肝移植中心接受肝移植的患者进行了面对面和电子邮件调查。主要结果包括肝移植前后的就业率、年薪、每周工作小时数、再就业障碍以及患者满意度。收集并分析了121例接受肝移植患者的回复。肝移植前,68例(56.1%)报告全职工作,13例(10.7%)兼职工作,40例(33.1%)失业。肝移植后,26例(21.4%)报告继续全职工作,18例(14.9%)兼职工作,77例(63.6%)失业。肝移植后平均每周工作小时数减少(16.1小时/周对39.9小时/周)。肝移植后平均年薪降低(17例年薪≥40,000美元对56例年薪≥40,000美元)。这些结果与患者肝移植前的期望不同,81.0%的既往就业患者认为他们会重返工作岗位,导致患者满意度下降。肝移植前从事体力要求高工作的患者重返工作的可能性较小。缺乏重返全职工作的原因包括早期疲劳和恢复体力困难。肝移植后的再就业率仍然很低,对于从事体力活动工作的患者尤其如此。疲劳是再就业的重大障碍,肝移植后增加身体康复可能会有益。在肝移植前,应让患者对重返工作有现实的期望。