Developing and testing a case-management intervention to support the return to work of health care workers with common mental health disorders

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Abstract

Background: To assess the feasibility and acceptability of conducting a trial of the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a new case-management intervention to facilitate the return to work of health care workers, on sick leave, having a common mental disorder (CMD). Methods: A mixed methods feasibility study. Results: Systematic review examined 40 articles and 2 guidelines. Forty-nine National Health Service Occupational Health (OH) providers completed a usual care survey. We trained six OH nurses as case managers and established six recruitment sites. Forty-two out of 1938 staff on sick leave with a CMD were screened for eligibility, and 24 participants were recruited. Out of them, 94% were female. Eleven participants received the intervention and 13 received usual care. Engagement with most intervention components was excellent. Return-to-work self-efficacy improved more in the intervention group than in the usual care group. Qualitative feedback showed the intervention was acceptable. Conclusions: The intervention was acceptable, feasible and low cost to deliver, but it was not considered feasible to recommend a large-scale effectiveness trial unless an effective method could be devised to improve the early OH referral of staff sick with CMD. Alternatively, the intervention could be trialled as a new stand-alone OH intervention initiated at the time of usual OH referral.

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APA

Parsons, V., Juszczyk, D., Gilworth, G., Ntani, G., Henderson, M., Smedley, J., … Madan, I. (2023). Developing and testing a case-management intervention to support the return to work of health care workers with common mental health disorders. Journal of Public Health (United Kingdom), 45(2), E285–E295. https://doi.org/10.1093/pubmed/fdac055

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