Effectiveness of multidisciplinary early rehabilitation in reducing behaviour-related risk factors

Authors

  • Mikhail Saltychev
  • Katri Laimi
  • Ashraf El-Metwally
  • Tuula Oksanen
  • Jaana Pentti
  • Marianna Virtanen
  • Anne Kouvonen
  • Mika Kivimäki
  • Jussi Vahtera

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0956

Keywords:

health behaviour change, health risk behaviour, propensity score, modifiable risks.

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the effect of a 4-week primary prevention programme on health-risk behaviours amongst employees at increased risk of work incapacity. Methods: Based on survey data and health records from 53,416 public sector employees in Finland, we identified 872 employees who participated in early rehabilitation after the baseline survey. We selected 2,440 propensity-score-matched controls for these rehabilitants. Changes in the prevalence of physical inactivity, obesity, heavy drinking, and smoking, as well as in the intensity of leisure-time physical activity, weight, and alcohol consumption after the intervention were examined between the baseline and two subsequent surveys representing short-term (mean follow-up 1. 7 years) and long-term (mean 5. 8 years) follow-ups. Results: There were no statistically significant differences between the rehabilitants and controls in terms of changes in weight, alcohol consumption, intensity of leisure-time physical activity, or prevalence of obesity, heavy drinking and physical inactivity during short-term or long-term follow-ups. During short-term follow-up, a higher rate of smoking cessation was observed for rehabilitants than controls (31. 7% vs. 20. 2%, p = 0. 037). Conclusion: Vocationally oriented multidisciplinary early rehabilitation had little effect on health risk behaviours.

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Published

2012-03-09

How to Cite

Saltychev, M., Laimi, K., El-Metwally, A., Oksanen, T., Pentti, J., Virtanen, M., … Vahtera, J. (2012). Effectiveness of multidisciplinary early rehabilitation in reducing behaviour-related risk factors. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 44(4), 370–377. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0956

Issue

Section

Original Report