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47 results on '"Back Injuries psychology"'

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1. Physical and Psychosocial Work Environmental Risk Factors for Back Injury among Healthcare Workers: Prospective Cohort Study.

2. The influence of age on quality of life after upper body burn.

3. A prospective study of factors affecting recovery from musculoskeletal injuries.

4. Predicting non return to work after orthopaedic trauma: the Wallis Occupational Rehabilitation RisK (WORRK) model.

5. A long, painful journey.

6. Pain-related fear predicts reduced spinal motion following experimental back injury.

7. Development of a cumulative psychosocial factor index for problematic recovery following work-related musculoskeletal injuries.

8. Preparing difficult clients to return to work.

9. Medical malpractice allegations of iatrogenic addiction in chronic opioid analgesic therapy: forensic case reports.

10. The effect of individual job coaching and use of health threat in a job-specific occupational health education program on prevention of work-related musculoskeletal back injury.

11. Course, diagnosis, and treatment of depressive symptomatology in workers following a workplace injury: a prospective cohort study.

12. Is a history of work-related low back injury associated with prevalent low back pain and depression in the general population?

13. A comparison of health-related quality of life for individuals with mental health disorders and common chronic medical conditions.

14. Patient clusters in acute, work-related back pain based on patterns of disability risk factors.

15. Integration and coordination of pain management in primary care.

16. Changes in spine loading patterns throughout the workday as a function of experience, lift frequency, and personality.

17. Fear of movement/(re)injury predicting chronic disabling low back pain: a prospective inception cohort study.

18. Investigating risk factors for chronicity: the importance of distinguishing between return-to-work status and self-report measures of disability.

19. Predicting return to work after low back injury using the Psychosocial Risk for Occupational Disability Instrument: a validation study.

20. Disparities in occupational low back injuries: predicting pain-related disability from satisfaction with case management in African Americans and Caucasians.

21. Prediction of chronic disability in work-related musculoskeletal disorders: a prospective, population-based study.

22. Patient centred CBT for chronic pain.

23. Partitioning the contributing role of biomechanical, psychosocial, and individual risk factors in the development of spine loads.

24. Psychologically based occupational rehabilitation: the Pain-Disability Prevention Program.

25. Biopsychosocial multivariate predictive model of occupational low back disability.

26. My journey of pain.

27. Perception of illness: nonspecificity of postconcussion syndrome symptom expectation.

28. Psychosocial job factors and return-to-work after compensated low back injury: a disability phase-specific analysis.

29. Life after back injury.

30. [The illness and death of heir to the throne Nikolai Aleksandrovich].

31. The effect of occupational socialization on nurses' patient handling practices.

32. Sensitivity and specificity of the indicators of sincere effort of the EPIC lift capacity test on a previously injured population.

33. A controlled trial of an educational pamphlet to prevent disability after occupational low back injury.

34. Back on track. Interview by Alison Moore.

35. A cross-sectional study correlating lumbar spine degeneration with disability and pain.

36. Return ticket.

37. Motivating the back injury patient.

38. Measuring quality of life in back patients: comparison of Health Status Questionnaire 2.0 and Quality of Life Inventory.

39. Catastrophizing, pain, and disability in patients with soft-tissue injuries.

41. Claim rates of compensable back injuries by age, gender, occupation, and industry. Do they relate to return-to-work experience?

42. Reconstructive memory bias in recall of neuropsychological symptomatology.

43. Back injury and work loss. Biomechanical and psychosocial influences.

44. [Back injuries--remedies are no guarantee].

45. [Back injuries--support in handling stress].

47. Positive and negative evidence of risk factors for back disorders.

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