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Course, Diagnosis, and Treatment of Depressive Symptomatology in Workers following a Workplace Injury: A Prospective Cohort Study

Authors :
Nancy Carnide
Renée-Louise Franche
F. Curtis Breslin
Pierre Côté
Niklas Krause
Sheilah Hogg-Johnson
Colette N. Severin
Ute Bültmann
Source :
The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. 54:534-546
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2009.

Abstract

Objectives: To estimate prevalence, incidence, and course of depressive symptoms and prevalence of mental health treatment following a workplace injury, and to estimate the association between depressive symptoms and return-to-work (RTW) trajectories. Method: In a prospective cohort study, workers filing a lost-time compensation claim for a work-related musculoskeletal disorder of the back or upper extremity were interviewed 1 month ( n = 599) and 6 months ( n = 430) postinjury. A high level of depressive symptoms was defined as 16 or more on the self-reported Center for Epidemiologic Studies—Depression (CES-D) Scale. The following estimates are reported: prevalence of high depressive symptom levels at 1 and 6 months postinjury; incidence, resolution, and persistence of high depressive symptom levels between 1 and 6 months; and prevalence of self-reported mental health treatment and depression diagnosis at 6 months postinjury. Results: Prevalence of high depressive symptom levels at 1 month and 6 months postinjury were 42.9% (95% CI 38.9% to 46.9%) and 26.5% (95% CI 22.3% to 30.7%), respectively. Among participants reporting high depressive symptom levels at 1 month postinjury, 47.2% (95% CI 39.9% to 54.5%) experienced a persistence of symptoms 6 months postinjury. By 6 months, 38.6% of workers who never returned to work or had work disability recurrences had high depressive symptom levels, compared with 17.7% of those with a sustained RTW trajectory. At 6–month follow-up, 12.9% (95% CI 5.8% to 20.1%) of participants with persistently high depressive symptom levels self-reported a depression diagnosis since injury and 23.8% (95% CI 14.7% to 32.9%) were receiving depression treatment. Conclusions: Depressive symptoms are pervasive in workers with musculoskeletal injuries, but transient for some, and seldom diagnosed as depression or treated.

Details

ISSN :
14970015 and 07067437
Volume :
54
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f24c575494fb0d227b47f36fe2f1affe