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Health Economics of Interdisciplinary Rehabilitation for Chronic Pain: Does it Support or Invalidate the Outcomes Research of These Programs?

Journal

CURRENT PAIN AND HEADACHE REPORTS
Volume 16, Issue 2, Pages 127-132

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11916-012-0249-z

Keywords

Chronic pain; Pain clinics; Multimodal treatment; Back pain; Rehabilitation; Interdisciplinary rehabilitation; Pain management; Economics

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Interdisciplinary rehabilitation has been shown to be effective for treatment of patients suffering from chronic nonmalignant pain with respect to activity level, pain intensity, function, or days of sick leave. However, effects in clinical outcome do not necessarily imply a superiority of the intervention from an economic point of view. Despite an increasing number of cost-utility and cost-effectiveness studies, systematic reviews outline the methodological heterogeneity of studies, which makes it impossible to perform meta-analyses and to draw conclusions from the studies. Recent publications add interesting information to the current discussion; these studies cover the long-term development of sickness absence post-intervention and the cost effectiveness of workplace interventions, as well as a collaborative intervention in primary care. Much research has been done, and tendencies of effectiveness are visible, but there is still a long way to go to understand the economic implications of interdisciplinary rehabilitation from the perspectives of society, the health insurers, and the patients.

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