This study aims to comprehensively analyse the course of psychosomatic rehabilitation - from access to quantifiable rehabilitation outcomes. A comparison is made between 3 groups of patients: German citizens, patients of Turkish nationality or patients of foreign or unknown nationality. The data set used comprises routine data of the German Pension Insurance regarding psychosomatic rehabilitation from the so called Reha-Statistik-Database (RSD, database for rehabilitation statistics) over a period from 2007 to 2014. We included 128,165 compulsorily insured persons who underwent psychosomatic rehabilitation in 2012. Among the patients in psychosomatic rehabilitation in 2012 5.8 % were of foreign nationality. Turkish patients were with 2.0 % the largest group, patients with another or unknown nationality or stateless patients constitute the additional group. The most common diagnoses for all groups were affective disorders and neurotic, somatoform and stress disorders. Differences between the groups can be demonstrated with regard to sociodemographics and employment status prior to rehabilitation: Patients of foreign nationality, and here especially Turkish patients, are on average younger, more often married and have less advanced vocational training than German patients. Accordingly, they work more often in less qualified jobs with lower wages. The health status prior rehabilitation, measured as days of sick leave, is also worse compared to German patients. In contrast to other indications there is no disadvantage regarding access to psychosomatic rehabilitation. On the contrary: the age-standardised uptake ratios of Turkish patients, especially of women, are markedly higher than in Germans. Treatment during psychosomatic rehabilitation is more or less identical. With regards to outcome of rehabilitation, reintegration into working life or transition into disability pension Turkish patients are less successful. As important influential variables for return to work (RTW) the following factors were identified: Employment duration in the last 12 months before the start of rehabilitation, the medically tested ability to work for the last employment, age and wage in the last year before the start of rehabilitation. Even after the inclusion of these variables in the logistic regression model, a direct influence of the Turkish citizenship has remained. In this study Turkish patients are a special group. This is especially true for Turkish women. They start from a lower baseline in comparison with their male compatriots, they have higher access to psychosomatic rehabilitation and the results of rehabilitation are less favourable. These findings may be attributable to the markedly worse health and employment status of the female Turkish patient group. Nevertheless, nationality itself remains to be a significant influencing factor.
Politics advocate the integration of patients in decision making processes as a means of individual participation. Patients' participation in research projects is a next step to fulfil this democratic goal.Concepts essential for rehabilitation are introduced that are germane in the context of participatory rehabilitation research. They are based on the results of 2 workshops where researchers, patients and those working in the field developed ideas for patients' participation in research and on a screening of relevant literature. Research traditions relevant for rehabilitation research are lined out, a stage model allowing design and documentation of patient participation is introduced, and recommendations for practice are given. The article ends with a list of open questions that need to be addressed in the future.
Institute 1 Deutsche Vereinigung für Rehabilitation (DVfR), Heidelberg 2 Deutsche Rentenversicherung Bund, Berlin 1 Hinweis: Die Begriff e partizipative Forschung und inklusive Forschung werden synonym verwendet; mögliche Unterschiede sind derzeit (noch) nicht defi niert.Heruntergeladen von: WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY. Urheberrechtlich geschützt.
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