Stay-At-Work Intervention
Cross-source consensus on Stay-At-Work Intervention from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
How it works
Benefits
Highlighted claims
- The Stay-At-Work intervention is a person-centred, interdisciplinary and cross-sectoral vocational rehabilitation programme for adults with chronic low back pain who are on sick leave or at risk of sick leave. — Co-developing a vocational rehabilitation intervention for individuals with chronic low back pain across a regional spine centre and three municipalities in Denmark: a three-stage intervention development study guided by the Medical Research Council framework
- The intervention aims to improve work functioning and support sustainable return to work by strengthening coordination across healthcare, municipal services, general practice and workplaces. — Co-developing a vocational rehabilitation intervention for individuals with chronic low back pain across a regional spine centre and three municipalities in Denmark: a three-stage intervention development study guided by the Medical Research Council framework
- The SAW intervention was designed to reduce fragmentation through shared assessment, documentation, meetings and consistent communication. — Co-developing a vocational rehabilitation intervention for individuals with chronic low back pain across a regional spine centre and three municipalities in Denmark: a three-stage intervention development study guided by the Medical Research Council framework
- The SAW intervention provides a framework for fragmented coordination, inconsistent work ability assessment, unclear diagnostic communication and psychological vulnerability in people with chronic low back pain. — Co-developing a vocational rehabilitation intervention for individuals with chronic low back pain across a regional spine centre and three municipalities in Denmark: a three-stage intervention development study guided by the Medical Research Council framework
- The intervention consists of eight structured activities intended to improve coordination and work functioning. — Co-developing a vocational rehabilitation intervention for individuals with chronic low back pain across a regional spine centre and three municipalities in Denmark: a three-stage intervention development study guided by the Medical Research Council framework