Abstract
Objective - To evaluate the effect on well-being and sickness certification of interviews and three dialogue sessions concerning ideas about pain in young immigrants suffering from long-standing, benign pain. Design - A randomized clinical four-week trial between two treatment groups. Setting - A primary health care centre, Stockholm, Sweden. Subjects - 92 persons, 25-45 years of age, on sick leave >6 weeks. Measures - Physical and psychiatric examinations and self-ratings of work ability and pain anxiety were made before and after the programme. Sick leave data were studied at three and eight-month follow-ups. Results - 45 immigrants, mean age 38 years, mean sick leave 13 months, completed the programme. There were no significant differences in general or diagnostic data between the treatment groups. All had pain. Three-quarters reported pain anxiety. Nearly half had depressive disorders. Only ten persons had self-rated ability for part-time work. After the programme, there were significant differences in favour of the experimental group in number of participants with pain anxiety (p=0.01), with diagnosed depression (p<0.05), with self-rated work ability (p=0.05), and in the number of participants who had returned to work at the eight-month follow-up (p<0.05). Conclusions - This study indicates that, for young immigrants suffering from long-standing benign pain, a structured dialogue with focus on concepts of pain may reduce pain anxiety and depressive mood, improve self-rated work ability, and increase the prospects of successful rehabilitation back to work.
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Löfvander, M., Engström, A., Theander, H., & Furhoff, A. K. (1997). Rehabilitation of young immigrants in primary care: A comparison between two treatment models. Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, 15(3), 123–128. https://doi.org/10.3109/02813439709018501
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