Handbook of Return to Work: From Research to Practice
Izabela Z. Schultz, Robert J. Gatchel (eds.)This comprehensive interdisciplinary synthesis focuses on the clinical and occupational intervention processes enabling workers to return to their jobs and sustain employment after injury or serious illness as well as ideas for improving the wide range of outcomes of entry and re-entry into the workplace. Information is accessible along key theoretical, research, and interventive lines, emphasizing a palette of evidence-informed approaches to return to work and stay at work planning and implementation, in the context of disability prevention. Condition-specific chapters detail best return to work and stay at work practices across diverse medical and psychological diagnoses, from musculoskeletal disorders to cancer, from TBI to PTSD. The resulting collection bridges the gap between research evidence and practice and gives readers necessary information from a range of critical perspectives.
Among the featured topics:
- Understanding motivation to return to work: economy of gains and losses.
- Overcoming barriers to return to work: behavioral and cultural change.
- Program evaluation in return to work: an integrative framework.
- Working with stakeholders in return to work processes.
- Return to work after major limb loss.