Different aspects were experienced as being important during the process of RTW after ABI. These aspects should be kept in mind during the process of RTW to make the outcome as successful as possible. It is advised to pay special attention to the recovery opportunities of an individual, to inform the employer, colleagues, occupation physician and the occupational specialist about ABI, and to support people with ABI for long time periods. An important role can be played by the rehabilitation centre.
The early vocational rehabilitation (EVR) facilitates an interdisciplinary and systematic focus on return to work during rehabilitation of people with acquired brain injury. The feasibility of the EVR protocol has been tested. The EVR protocol is ready for implementation and wider testing in other rehabilitation settings.
The aim of this study was to assess the after-effects of night work on mental performance. Twenty experienced shift workers were examined in a baseline condition and during recovery after a night shift period. For control purposes eight other workers were studied in a similar baseline condition and during recovery after a non-night shift period. The subjects performed memory search tasks before and after a bicycle ergometer test. Cycling had different effects on mental performance, leaving the speed and accuracy of the reactions unchanged in the baseline and the non-night-recovery condition, while decreasing the mental performance in the night-recovery condition. Also in this condition a higher level mental effort investment was measured. These results suggest an incomplete recovery on the first fully undisturbed day-off (32 h) after a period of night work, manifesting itself in a deterioration of the efficiency of the information processing.
A literature review was performed on the subject of combined exposure to stressors in the working situation. A general, dynamic model of workload served as the theoretical framework for the study. In this model, every factor that triggers a physiological or psychological response in the worker is regarded as a stressor. Decision latitude plays an important role in the model. A quantitative and qualitative analysis was performed on the available literature. It was concluded that the stressors that appear in studies on combined exposure stem mostly from the physical, chemical and biological environment. The task contents, the labor conditions, social relationships at work and the decision latitude are considerably less often studied in relation to combined exposure. It is concluded that important concepts in the study of combined exposure (e.g. interaction, independence, synergism, antagonism) are often quite carelessly mentioned in the literature. Explicit definition of these concepts is lacking in many publications. Establishment of maximum exposure levels is not yet possible for most stressor combinations. Examples are given of combinations that do allow more or less definite conclusions. It is recommended that more studies should be interdisciplinary organized. More studies are necessary in the field, studying effects of long exposure periods in the working population instead of studying students in laboratory situations. Exposure of susceptible groups, such as older workers and partially disabled workers, deserves special attention.
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