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Even after adjustment for the initial treatment of the sciatica and for other clinical factors, patients who had been receiving Workers' Compensation at baseline were more likely to be receiving disability benefits and were less likely to report relief from symptoms and improvement in quality of life at the time of the four-year follow-up than patients who had not been receiving Workers' Compensation at baseline. Nonetheless, most patients returned to work regardless of their initial disability status, and those who had been receiving Workers' Compensation at baseline were only slightly less likely to be working after four years. Whether or not they had been receiving Workers' Compensation at baseline, patients who had been managed with an operation reported greater relief from symptoms and improvement in functional status at the time of the four-year follow-up compared with patients who had been managed nonoperatively, even though the outcomes with regard to disability and work status in these two groups were comparable.
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Steven J. Atlas
Yuchiao Chang
ERIN KAMMANN
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery
Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard University Press
Day Family Medicine
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Atlas et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d9da5b2a25b240b7a3dd71 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2106/00004623-200001000-00002