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. 2012 Sep;55(9):816-32.
doi: 10.1002/ajim.22029. Epub 2012 Mar 5.

Pre-surgery disability compensation predicts long-term disability among workers with carpal tunnel syndrome

Affiliations

Pre-surgery disability compensation predicts long-term disability among workers with carpal tunnel syndrome

June T Spector et al. Am J Ind Med. 2012 Sep.

Abstract

Background: We sought to identify early risk factors for work disability compensation prior to and after carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) surgery, and to determine whether pre-surgery disability compensation is associated with long-term disability.

Methods: Washington State workers' compensation administrative data and data from interviews with workers 18 days (median) after submitting new workers' compensation claims for CTS were examined. Baseline risk factors for pre-surgery disability compensation and for long-term disability (>365 days of work disability compensation prior to 2 years after claim filing) were evaluated for workers who underwent CTS surgery and had at least 1 day of disability compensation (N = 670).

Results: After adjustment for baseline long-term disability risk factors, workers with pre-surgery disability compensation had over five times the odds of long-term disability. Baseline factors in multiple domains, including job, psychosocial, clinical, and worker pain and function, were associated with both pre-surgery disability compensation and long-term disability.

Conclusions: Risk factors for work disability prior to and after CTS surgery are similar, and early work disability is a risk factor for long-term CTS-related disability. An integrated approach to CTS-related disability prevention could include identifying and addressing combined risk factors soon after claim filing, more efficient use of conservative treatments and appropriate work modifications to minimize early work loss, and, when indicated, timely surgical intervention.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest statement: The authors report no conflicts of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Study Profile * 97% of participants who had surgery after claim filing had surgery within the first year.

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