Publication

Return-to-Work Following Open Reduction and Internal Fixation of Proximal Humerus Fractures

Journal Paper/Review - Sep 15, 2014

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PubMed
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Citation
Dietrich M, Wasmer M, Platz A, Spross C. Return-to-Work Following Open Reduction and Internal Fixation of Proximal Humerus Fractures. Open Orthop J 2014; 8:281-7.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Open Orthop J 2014; 8
Publication Date
Sep 15, 2014
Issn Electronic
1874-3250
Pages
281-7
Brief description/objective

OBJECTIVES
Shoulder disorders have an important impact on a patient's capacity to work. We investigated whether there is a relationship between subjective or objective outcome measures and the ability and time for returning to work (RTW) after a proximal humerus fracture (PHF).

DESIGN
Retrospective single-centre study from March 2003 to June 2008.

SETTING
City hospital, trauma level one centre.

INTERVENTION
All PHF stabilized with a PHILOS(®).

MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS
Routine follow-up examinations (X-ray, Constant-Murley Score (CMS), Short-Form 36 (SF-36)) were performed prospectively after 1.5, 3, 6 and 12 months or until RTW. Primary interest was the comparison of the outcome scores with the time needed for RTW.

RESULTS
72 patients (52 years (22-64), 37 (51%) women) fulfilled the inclusion criteria. We distinguished "office-workers" (OW) (n = 49, 68%) from patients who worked at a physically demanding job (PW) (n = 23, 32%). Although time for RTW was fundamentally different (42 (OW) vs 118 days (PW), p<0.001), CMS (64.7 vs 64.1) and SF-36 (66.8 vs 69.9) at time of RTW were almost identical. At follow-up, CMS and SF-36 were always lower in the PW group.

CONCLUSION
Jobs which require higher physical demands were likely to influence and to delay RTW. This study identifies cut off values for CMS and SF-36 at which a patient feels capable or willing to RTW after PHF. These values show the importance and impact of a patient's occupation or demands on RTW. We were able to show, that besides age, sex and fracture, the type of occupation might alter the scores in postoperative outcomes.