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Published in: Surgical Endoscopy 10/2009

Open Access 01-10-2009

Can prolonged sick leave after gynecologic surgery be predicted? An observational study in the Netherlands

Authors: Hans A. M. Brölmann, Antonie Vonk Noordegraaf, David J. Bruinvels, Riekie H. C. de Vet, Amarantha A. Dirksz, Judith A. F. Huirne

Published in: Surgical Endoscopy | Issue 10/2009

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Abstract

Background

Sick leave frequently has been used as an outcome to evaluate minimal invasive surgery compared with conventional open surgery. However, sick leave is determined not only by the surgical approach. Recently, a postoperative recovery-specific quality-of-life questionnaire, the Recovery Index (RI-10), has been developed and validated. This study investigated the relation of the Recovery Index 10, the RI-6 (a subset of 6 questions), and the type of surgery to sick leave.

Methods

The study enrolled 46 patients with a paid job scheduled for elective gynecologic surgery, who filled out the RI-10. After 8 weeks, the patients were approached by telephone to give information on their return to work.

Results

Of the 46 patients, 23 (50%) returned to work completely after 8 weeks, 14 (30%) resumed work partly, and 9 (20%) did not resume work at all. In the analysis, the patients who completely returned to work were compared with those who did not return or partially returned. Recovery as expressed in the RI-6 improved with time after surgery. It appeared that the measurement 2 weeks after surgery showed the best discriminative capacity to predict sick leave after 8 weeks, with an area under the curve of 0.88 (confidence interval, 0.74–1.03). The subjective postoperative recovery as expressed by the RI-6 is more closely related to the type of surgery (p = 0.001) sick leave is (p = 0.14).

Conclusions

The subjective recovery scored by the patient on a questionnaire of six questions is a better outcome than sick leave for evaluating surgical approaches. If administered 2 weeks after surgery, it may predict prolonged sick leave.
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Metadata
Title
Can prolonged sick leave after gynecologic surgery be predicted? An observational study in the Netherlands
Authors
Hans A. M. Brölmann
Antonie Vonk Noordegraaf
David J. Bruinvels
Riekie H. C. de Vet
Amarantha A. Dirksz
Judith A. F. Huirne
Publication date
01-10-2009
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Surgical Endoscopy / Issue 10/2009
Print ISSN: 0930-2794
Electronic ISSN: 1432-2218
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00464-008-0287-0

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