학술논문

Work Disability Duration Among Mobile Workers: Does Intraprovincial Mobility Matter as Much as Interprovincial Mobility?
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Occupational & Environmental Medicine. Apr2024, Vol. 66 Issue 4, p329-338. 10p.
Subject
*EMPLOYEES
*SICK leave
*NOMADS
*WORKERS' compensation
*POPULATION geography
*EMPLOYMENT of people with disabilities
*MEDICAL records
*ACQUISITION of data
*TIME
*EMPLOYMENT reentry
*REGRESSION analysis
Language
ISSN
1076-2752
Abstract
Objective: The aim of the study is to compare work disability duration of intraprovincially and interprovincially mobile workers with nonmobile workers in British Columbia, Canada. Methods: Workers' compensation claims were extracted for workers injured between 2010 and 2019. Employer and residential postal codes were converted to economic regions to define nonmobile, intraprovincially, and interprovincially mobile workers. Quantile regression models using matched cohorts were used to estimate differences in work disability days at different percentiles of the distribution. Results: Compared with nonmobile workers, both mobile worker groups had longer work disability durations, particularly interprovincially mobile workers. Differences persisted in injury-stratified models and were partially or fully attenuated in some industry-stratified models. Conclusions:Workers' compensation systems, employers, and healthcare providers may need to tailor specific interventions for mobile workers who are from out-of-province as well as traveling between regions in the province. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]