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Occupational Medicine 2007 57(7):488-491; doi:10.1093/occmed/kqm063
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Occupational Medicine. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Advice given to patients about return to work and driving following surgery

Mary Clayton1 and Peter Verow2

1 Centrica, Gould Street, Manchester M4 4RN, UK
2 Sandwell Healthcare NHS Trust, 30 Hallam Close, Hallam Street, West Bromwich, UK

Background The post-operative advice given to patients by health care practitioners regarding return to work and return to driving may have an impact upon their absence duration. The only guidance that is readily available to assist health care practitioners give this advice is provided by the Department of Work and Pensions (DWP).

Aims To identify what advice local consultant surgeons, occupational physicians and general practitioners give to patients about return to work and driving, following benign abdominal hysterectomy (BAH) and Birmingham hip resurfacing (BHR). To explore health care practitioners' awareness of the DWP evidence-based return to work guidelines.

Method A questionnaire was administered to 216 health care practitioners, asking them about the advice they would give to patients undergoing BAH or BHR, regarding return to driving and return to work.

Results Fifty-eight per cent of all health care practitioners that responded were unaware of the DWP evidence-based guidance. Seventy-four per cent of occupational physicians were aware of this guidance but only 32% of general practitioners and 0% of hospital specialists. The advice given regarding expected duration of sickness absence was very variable, ranging between 2 weeks and >12 weeks for both BAH and BHR procedures. Twenty-one different operative ‘patient information sheets’ were examined and these included only very brief and very general advice about return to work.

Conclusion National guidance on post-operative return to work advice could be beneficial. The guidance should be supported by health care practitioners and provide advice about normal ranges of time to return to driving and to return to work.

Keywords      Hip surgery; hysterectomy; return to driving; return to work; sickness absence duration


Correspondence to: P. Verow, Sandwell Occupational Health Service, 30 Hallam Close, Hallam Street, West Bromwich B71 4HU, UK. e-mail: peter.verow{at}swbh.nhs.uk


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