Work-related medical rehabilitation in patients with mental disorders: the protocol of a randomized controlled trial (WMR-P, DRKS00023175)

Miriam Markus*, Nina Gabriel, Markus Bassler, Matthias Bethge

*Corresponding author for this work
7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Various rehabilitation services and return-to-work programs have been developed in order to reduce sickness absence and increase sustainable return-to-work. To ensure that people with a high risk of not returning to work can participate in working life, the model of work-related medical rehabilitation was developed in Germany. The efficacy of these programs in patients with mental disorders has been tested in only a few trials with very specific intervention approaches. To date, there is no clear evidence of the effectiveness of work-related medical rehabilitation implemented in real-care practice. Methods/design: Our randomized controlled trial will be conducted in six rehabilitation centers across Germany. Within 15 months, 1800 patients with mental disorders (300 per rehabilitation center) will be recruited and assigned one-to-one either to a work-related medical rehabilitation program or to a conventional psychosomatic rehabilitation program. Participants will be aged 18–60 years. The control group will receive a conventional psychosomatic rehabilitation program without additional work-related components. The intervention group will receive a work-related medical rehabilitation program that contains at least 11 h of work-related treatment modules. Follow-up data will be assessed at the end of the rehabilitation and 3 and 12 months after completing the rehabilitation program. The primary outcome is a stable return to work. Secondary outcomes cover several dimensions of health, functioning and coping strategies. Focus groups and individual interviews supplement our study with qualitative data. Discussion: This study will determine the relative effectiveness of a complex and newly implemented work-related rehabilitation strategy for patients with mental disorders. Trial registration: German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS00023175, September 29 2020).

Original languageEnglish
Article number225
JournalBMC Psychiatry
Volume21
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)225
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 03.05.2021

Funding

We thank Alexandra Lambrecht and the team of Rehazentrum Oberharz in Clausthal-Zellerfeld, Volker K?llner, Ulrich Adam-Ke?ler and the team of Reha-Zentrum Seehof in Teltow, Timo Specht, Frank Rosbiegal and the team of Fachklinik Aukrug, Andrea Budde, Astrid Jeising and the team of Klinik am Hainberg in Bad Hersfeld, Barbara Guldin and the team of Celenus Parkklinik in Bad Bergzabern and Michael K?fer and the team of MediClin Bliestal Kliniken in Blieskastel for cooperating in our study. The study is funded by the Federal German Pension Insurance, Ruhrstr. 2, 10709 Berlin, Germany (grant number: 0421/00–40–69-10-11) through grant program “Forschung und Ergebnistransfer für eine bedarfsorientierte Rehabilitation” (Research and Transfer of Results for Needs-Based Rehabilitation), which was initiated by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research and the Federal German Pension Insurance to generate scientifically sound findings on needs-based rehabilitation in routine care and to transfer research findings into practice. Funding covers personnel, material and traveling expenses. The funding body has no impact on the design of the study, data collection, data analysis, data interpretation, and on writing the manuscript. Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.

Research Areas and Centers

  • Research Area: Center for Population Medicine and Public Health (ZBV)

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