Decline In Work Disability Due To Rheumatoid Arthritis
Main Category: Arthritis / RheumatologyAlso Included In: Pain / Anesthetics
Article Date: 15 Apr 2008 - 3:00 PDT
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Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic inflammatory disease affecting the joints and, in severe cases, vital organs. Marked by pain, fatigue, and loss of dexterity and mobility, RA has been strongly associated with work disability in the US. In previous studies of patients with advanced RA, 10 years in duration, the prevalence of work disability has been estimated at as high as 50 percent. However, most studies examining this costly effect of RA are well over a decade old. Since then, much has changed about the disease and the nature of work.
Prompted by these changes, researchers at Boston University speculated that the high prevalence of work disability among RA patients may have changed, and they set out to provide a comprehensive, up-to-date estimate. Featured in the April 2008 issue of Arthritis Care & Research (http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritis), their data suggests that the employability outlook for men and women with advanced RA has improved since the mid-1980s.
Using the National Data Bank (NDB) longitudinal study of RA, researchers identified 5,384 subjects for analyses. All participants completed extensive surveys every 6 months between January 2002 and December 2005. Questions covered employment status at disease onset, discontinuation of work prior to traditional retirement age - 65 years, cessation of work attributed to arthritis, and, for those currently employed, work characteristics. Participants were also asked to supply demographic data and the date of RA diagnosis. Functional limitation was determined by score on the Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ). Subgroups of patients were formed to assess prevalence of work disability by 5-year intervals of disease duration. In addition, the annual incidence of work disability was calculated over 3 separate time periods: 2003, 2004, and 2005.
The mean age of the RA study population was 52 years. 82 percent of the subjects were women and 63 percent had more than a high school education. The mean disease duration was 14 years and the mean HAQ score was 1.0, indicating moderate functional limitation. 85 percent of subjects had been employed at disease onset and 56 percent were currently employed. Nearly three-quarters of these employed subjects worked full-time, 41 percent held professional or managerial jobs, and 16 percent were self-employed. Among subjects who were not employed, 43.5 percent were disabled; the remainder described themselves as either retired, full-time homemakers, or unemployed.
The prevalence of work cessation before age 65 increased with years of disease duration. This ranged from 23 percent among patients with relatively early RA - 1 to 3 years, to 35 percent in those living with RA for a decade, and 51 percent in those with RA for at least a quarter century. The prevalence of arthritis-attributed work cessation also increased with disease duration but was somewhat lower, beginning with 14 percent in subjects with 1 to 3 years, increasing to 29 percent in subjects with 10 years, and culminating at 42 percent in those with RA for 25 years or more. The annual incidence of premature work cessation was 12 percent in 2003, 9 percent in 2004, and 9 percent in 2005. Incidence of work cessation directly attributed to arthritis was even lower, about 6 percent per year, and decreased slightly over the 3 years. 39 percent of the subjects who stopped working later returned to work over the course of the study period.
Supported by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, this study suggests a decline in the prevalence of RA work disability, particularly among patients with 10 years of disease duration, since the mid-1980s. As its authors note, there are several possible explanations for this, including declines in both the unemployment rate and the physical demands of jobs in the US, as well as improvements in the treatment of RA. Among other notable findings, many cases of work disability were temporary and many may have had little relationship to RA.
"Work disability among persons with RA in the US is still a substantial problem," observes the study's lead author Saralynn Allaire, ScD. "However, our data in comparison with previous US studies also suggest there has been some improvement over the past 15 to 20 years in those with longer-standing disease." As Allaire acknowledges, this study has limitations. "Because subjects with mild RA may not be fully represented in the NDB sample and may have less work disability, the actual RA work disability prevalence could be lower than we found. On the other hand, because NDB subjects have higher educational attainment and are more often white than the US population, and because these characteristics offer employment advantages, the actual RA work disability rate may be higher than we found."
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Source: Sean Wagner
Wiley-Blackwell
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (3)
Lower Incidence Due To Inability To Qualify
posted by Joe on 21 Apr 2008 at 12:00 pmAs a reactive arthritis suffer for 2 years now and a one year wait (so far) for SSDI I would have to say that based upon attorney and workers in the rehabilitation industry that a major reason for the decline in "disabled" workers is the reluctance of the Social Security Administration to recognize and accept physician's recommendations for disability qualification.
I have been unable to work in any capacity in over a year and have been continually rejected for SSD. Being unable to care for myself and even to provide for my medical care (except at the grace of a dearly beloved benefactor) I would probably not be alive today to write this.
God bless those who are helping others in my situation. I hate to think where I would be today if I were totally dependent on the government for a timely response to my needs. I am sure that there are many people who need to be classified as "disabled" that are blowing in the wind of hard-hearted politicians and their arbitrary policies.
RA Disability Article
posted by Anon on 15 Nov 2009 at 12:09 amWell it appears I have read this article one year after it was written. In any case I find myself suffering from severe RA at the age of only 27. I am already on methotrexate and cortosteriods and sleeping meds which obvioously do not work. (2:00 am) I find it interesting that the article blatantly admits to not studying the middle or lower class levels of society. Of course this data is now extemely skewed and inaccurate therefore giving very false hope to someone like myself. Very sad thing these so called studies. I am curious to know if my constant battle my entire life with 'true immune system' food allergies and RA are related or just mier coincidence? Why is it that the foods eat trigger immune responses why is it that when I eat those o so delicious foods my hands light up and swell and so do my feet. And if my immune system is already being compromised by my food allergies and has nothing left to fight other things why would it be attacking my own self??? Why would my body release antibodies to joints and create inflammation if it was not related to allergies? An allergic response to a food allergy is so close to the symptoms of RA and yet doc says no no not related. Let's think here RA is an over active immune response to your own self. Well no one controls you but you. Therefore if you ingest what your body percieves to be a toxin and begins to attack whereever it can find it such as the blood stream being a prime place once food and nutrients are ingested. Then is it so far fetched to think that the immune system is in overdrive because of constant attacks from something you are concieving on a daily basis? Like say vanilla syrup from starbucks in your coffee? Tons of cornsyrup fine for you but not for me I suffer from a corn allergy. Is it possible that I am unknowingly be selfdestructive? Now suppose that over time this toxin of corn daily ingested has gotten into your bloodstream and overall system it has now gotten into your joints and bone growth and left little bits of itself in all the places where blood doesn't circulate as quickly such as your extremities being your hands and feet??! Does this make sense to anyone out there or is it really just me and my crazy thinking!?? Please no kidding at least someone let me know if they agree or not?
Thank You, Anon
posted by Mary on 27 Jan 2011 at 12:31 pmI also believe rheumatoid arthritis is an allergy. Anon's idea that it could be the vegetable "corn" and it's sugar is something to think about.
I took the intravenous immune killers of Tcells and Bcells and methotrexate and Arava. When I couldn't take them anymore, the pain came back worse then ever.
The Advil gave me terrible stomach pain and I got diverticulosis and skin rashes from those medications.
Those medications do not do anything for you except mask your symptoms. You still have RA and it is still progressing, regardless of what the literature from the pharmaceutical companies say and what the rheumatologist tells you.
We need real diagnosticians in this country who know about environmental medicine and how to test for all heavy metals and pesticides and insecticides and then give you something to eradicate these from our bodies.
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