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Employment status and its associated factor for patients 12 months after intensive care: Secondary analysis of the SMAP-HoPe-study

Authors :
Akira Ouchi
Junpei Haruna
Hideaki Sakuramoto
Yoshiki Masuda
Mio Kitayama
Masako Shirasaka
Miki Toyoshima
Takeshi Unoki
Yosuke Satoi
Tomoki Kuribara
Sakura Uemura
Mayumi Hino
Takako Yamaguchi
Yuko Fukuda
Yuko Shiba
Takumi Nagao
Takahiro Tsujimoto
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Returning to work is a serious issue that affects patients who are being discharged from the intensive care unit (ICU). This study aimed to clarify the employment status and the perceived household financial status of ICU patients 12 months following discharge from the ICU. Additionally, a hypothesis of whether depressive symptoms were associated with subsequent unemployment status was tested. This study was a subgroup analysis using data from the published Survey of Multicenter Assessment with Postal questionnaire for Post-Intensive Care Syndrome (PICS) for Home Living Patients (the SMAP-HoPe study) in Japan. The patients included those who had a history of staying in the ICU for at least three nights and had been living at home for one year following discharge, between October 2019 and July 2020. We assessed employment status, subjective cognitive functions, household financial status, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale scores, and EuroQOL-5 dimensions of physical function at 12 months following intensive care. This study included 328 patients who were known to be employed prior to ICU admission. The median age was 64 (Interquartile Range [IQR] 52-72), and males were predominant (86%). Seventy-nine (24%) of those evaluated were unemployed. The number of patients who reported worsened financial status was significantly higher in the unemployed group. (p

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........3c8028a956cb340ada3032a06bb14e2b