Coordinators in the return-to-work process: Mapping their work models

PLoS One. 2023 Aug 10;18(8):e0290021. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0290021. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Purpose: In recent decades, many countries have implemented return-to-work coordinators to combat high rates of sickness absence and insufficient collaboration in the return-to-work process. The coordinators should improve communication and collaboration between stakeholders in the return-to-work process for people on sickness absence. How they perform their daily work remains unexplored, and we know little about to what extent they collaborate and perform other work tasks to support people on sickness absence. This study examines which work models return-to-work coordinators use in primary healthcare, psychiatry and orthopaedics in Sweden.

Methods: A questionnaire was sent to all 82 coordinators in one region (89% response rate) with questions about the selection of patients, individual patient support, healthcare collaboration, and external collaboration. Random forest classification analysis was used to identify the models.

Results: Three work models were identified. In model A, coordinators were more likely to select certain groups of patients, spend more time in telephone than in face-to-face meetings, and collaborate fairly much. In Model B there was less patient selection and much collaboration and face-to-face meetings. Model C involved little patient selection, much telephone contact and very little collaboration. Model A was more common in primary healthcare, model C in orthopaedics, while model B was distributed equally between primary healthcare and psychiatry.

Conclusion: The work models correspond differently to the coordinator's assignments of supporting patients and collaborating with healthcare and other stakeholders. The differences lie in how much they actively select patients, how much they collaborate, and with whom. Their different distribution across clinical contexts indicates that organisational demands influence how work models evolve in practice.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Orthopedic Procedures*
  • Orthopedics*
  • Return to Work
  • Sick Leave
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Sweden

Grants and funding

VS received funding from the Kamprad Family Foundation for Research (Grant No 20190271). https://familjenkampradsstiftelse.se/ ME received funding from Region Stockholm (Grant No FoUI-954268, FoUI-936413). https://www.researchweb.org/is/stockholm The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to publish the results.