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1.
Rehabilitation (Stuttg) ; 42(4): 195-203, 2003 Aug.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12938041

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Surveys with a main focus on back pain tend to isolate the complaint from possibly concomitant pains, other symptoms and disorders. Severe chronic back pain is assumed here to imply more than pain in the back. PARTICIPANTS AND METHODS: We report results from a two stage survey conducted in 1998 - 2000. The initial postal questionnaire addressed all 10,000 actively employed blue collar workers from a regional pension fund (Landesversicherungsanstalt Schleswig-Holstein) aged 40 - 54 and residing in or around Luebeck/Germany (68 % males). Subjects reporting severe and disabling back pain were invited to a socio-medical examination. The response and participation rates were 58 % and 65 % respectively. Non-response and non-participation seem to result in minor though opposite, effects. RESULTS: The prevalence of current back pain (back pain of any severity within the past 7 days) is high (68 %; including 16 % with severe, disabling back pain) despite the preponderance of males and a probable healthy worker effect. 82 % of subjects participating in the second round reported recurrent or persisting back pain on the day of examination, in the majority with a chronic fluctuating and overall deteriorating course pattern. 18 % reported no current back pain and hence gave prospective (and additionally retrospective) evidence of an episodic-intermittent course of the disorder. The former group showed significantly more pains, bodily complaints, dysfunctional cognitions, emotional distress and concomitant disorders. 35 % of them indicated back pain as their dominant health problem; 49 % identified back pain and another disorder as dominant, and 16 % reported other prominent health problems. More than 70 % of "other" disorders originated from the musculoskeletal system often involving the extremities. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION: Back pain is very common among blue collar workers. Severe disabling back pain is usually associated with numerous other pains, bodily complaints, disorders, and indicators of psychological distress ("amplified back pain"). However, even amplified back pain is not always the sole or dominant health problem. Assessing the degree of "amplification" seems helpful in splitting a previously homogeneous group of severely affected back pain sufferers-with possible prognostic and therapeutic consequences.


Subject(s)
Insurance, Disability/statistics & numerical data , Low Back Pain/epidemiology , Workers' Compensation/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Comorbidity , Cross-Sectional Studies , Disease Progression , Female , Germany/epidemiology , Health Surveys , Healthy Worker Effect , Humans , Incidence , Low Back Pain/rehabilitation , Male , Middle Aged , Recurrence , Retrospective Studies , Somatoform Disorders/epidemiology , Somatoform Disorders/rehabilitation
2.
Rehabilitation (Stuttg) ; 41(4): 237-48, 2002 Aug.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12168148

ABSTRACT

Type 2 diabetes is considered a multidimensional health impairment which includes several components like risk factors, cofactors and complications. The early and consequent therapy of all of these components reduces secondary complications. Instead of simply applying drug treatment, a more holistic concept including behavioural medicine therapy and empowerment of patients has been found much more effective. The facilities required for such a multifactorial therapy by different health care professions could easily be provided by the medical rehabilitation services available under the German pension insurance scheme. However, this emphasizes the demand for standardized protocols to achieve an objective allocation of rehabilitation services to individuals in need. In an epidemiological study on 12 429 working insurants (age 41 - 60 years) of the pension insurance fund in the region of Luebeck, persons suffering from type 2 diabetes were identified and evaluated regarding a need for medical rehabilitation. Therefore, an algorithm was developed quantifying the multidimensional disturbances which accumulate in type 2 diabetes mellitus. The following indicators are taken into consideration: risk factors like eating behaviour, lack of physical activity, smoking and stress; metabolic parameters such as HbA1c and plasma lipids; cofactors like hypertension and depression and, additionally, the acute complication of hypoglycaemia. Based on this rehabilitation score, 19 % of cases in a preliminary evaluation of 79 patients with type 2 diabetes showed a need for medical rehabilitation therapy.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/rehabilitation , Needs Assessment/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Female , Germany , Humans , Life Style , Male , Middle Aged , National Health Programs , Resource Allocation
3.
Am J Public Health ; 91(3): 369-74, 2001 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11236400

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Social cohesion is recognized as a fundamental condition for healthy populations, but social cohesion itself arises from political unity. The history of the Berlin Wall provides a unique opportunity to examine the effects of partition on social cohesion and, by inference, on health. METHODS: This ethnographic study consisted of examination of the territory formerly occupied by the Wall, formal and informal interviews with Berlin residents, and collection of cultural documents related to the Wall. Transcripts, field notes, and documents were examined by means of a keyword-in-context analysis. RESULTS: The separation of Berlin into 2 parts was a traumatic experience for the city's residents. After partition, East and West Germany had divergent social, cultural, and political experiences and gradually grew apart. CONCLUSIONS: The demolition of the Wall--the symbol and the instrument of partition--makes possible but does not ensure the reintegration of 2 populations that were separated for 40 years. The evolution of a new common culture might be accelerated by active attempts at cultural and social exchange.


Subject(s)
Communism , Culture , Social Alienation , Social Change , Berlin , Female , Germany, East , Humans , Male , Socioeconomic Factors , Stress, Psychological
4.
Gesundheitswesen ; 63(1): 49-55, 2001 Jan.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11272866

ABSTRACT

Assessing health care needs in populations has become a major activity of public health medicine worldwide. Its methodology has been developing mainly in the English-speaking world. Concept, methods, and techniques have not yet reached Germany though recently the national expert advisory council for the concerted action in health care (Sachverständigenrat für die Konzertierte Aktion im Gesundheitswesen) provided first "official" definitions of demand, supply, and need to identify over- and undersupply in health care. This article aims at defining, from a combined sociolegal and sociomedical perspective, the need for medical rehabilitation measures among insurees of German pension funds. According to section 15 SGB VI rehabilitation is conceived as a medically coordinated multimodal-multidisciplinary intervention with a cognitive-behavioural orientation. To objectify the need for rehabilitation a series of 9 questions was developed enquiring inter alia about the presence of a disease or disability, the extent or "amplification" of the disorder, its course pattern, the implied risk of permanent work disability and likely success of rehabilitation. Nonspecific back pain served as a paradigmatic condition. One of the main problems encountered is the presently small evidence base to arrive at the necessary prognostic and therapeutic judgements.


Subject(s)
National Health Programs/legislation & jurisprudence , Needs Assessment/legislation & jurisprudence , Pensions/statistics & numerical data , Rehabilitation, Vocational/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Aged , Disability Evaluation , Female , Germany , Humans , Low Back Pain/epidemiology , Low Back Pain/rehabilitation , Male , Middle Aged , Risk Assessment
5.
Rehabilitation (Stuttg) ; 38 Suppl 2: S76-9, 1999 Dec.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10652703

ABSTRACT

In Germany, members of social insurance (e.g., pension) schemes have to apply for medical rehabilitation. Usually, the applications are the expression of a subjective demand. If the applications are granted this leads to the actual supply of medical rehabilitation services. Formerly, long waiting lists were common. These have been replaced by a new balance between demand (amount of applications), "offer" (capacity of rehabilitation clinics) and the amount of granted applications. In addition to these notions, the article develops the concept of need for rehabilitation services based on sociomedical indications. Consequently, the need for medical rehabilitation can--to a certain degree--be objectified. The concept of need should not be mixed up with that of demand: not every member of a social insurance scheme who objectively is in need of medical rehabilitation realizes the need, not everybody who realizes a need will apply for rehabilitation, and not all applications will be granted. The article gives an overview of different ways of needs assessment.


Subject(s)
National Health Programs/statistics & numerical data , Needs Assessment/statistics & numerical data , Rehabilitation/statistics & numerical data , Germany , Health Services Research , Humans
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