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Stressful
Jobs Keep
Stroke Patiens From Work
(Reuters Health) - The physical and psychological demands of a
patient's job influence whether he or she will return to work
after have a mild to moderately severe stroke, according to a
report presented at the 26th International Stroke Conference of
the American Heart Association.
``This is
the first time that we have actually looked at job characteristics
to see how they influenced how fast people can go back to work
after having an ischemic stroke,'' Dr. Marcella A. Wozniak, from
the University of Maryland in Baltimore, told Reuters Health.
Ischemic strokes are the most common type of stroke and are caused
by a reduction of blood flow to the brain, usually due to a clot.
Wozniak and
colleagues studied 174 people aged 24 to 64 years who had been
working full time before experiencing an ischemic stroke. About
6 weeks after the stroke, each patients filled out a series of
questionnaire. At 6 months and 12 months, patients were contacted
to see if they had returned to work.
``We found
that at the end of 1 year, about 34% of the patients had not been
able to return to work and about 55% had returned,'' Wozniak said.
While the severity of the stroke was a significant factor, job
characteristics also significantly predicted return to work. ``Other
factors such as race, ethnic background, gender, income, depression
were not at all associated with return to work,'' Wozniak said.
The physical
demands of the job, the psychological demands of the job, and
job insecurity were associated with return to work.
``If the job
was more physically demanding or it was more stressful, or if
(they) felt that (their) chance of being fired in the next 5 years
was good, patients were less likely to return to work,'' Wozniak
explained.
She and her
associates also found that social support on the job tended to
be an important factor as well.
``If patients
felt that their boss and coworkers were supportive, patients were
more likely to go back to work,'' Wozniak said.
``We would
like to develop interventions to help people get back to work.
You can work to lessen the degree of job demand, and increase
the social support,'' she continued. ``On a practical level, you
might have to tell some patients that they are going to have difficulty
going back to work, and maybe they should explore the possibilities
of disability.''
Reference
Source 89
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