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Successful return to work: the role of fairness and workplace‐based strategies

C. Gail Hepburn (University of Lethbridge, Lethbridge, Canada, and Institute for Work and Health, Toronto, Canada)
Renée‐Louise Franche (Occupational Health and Safety Agency for Healthcare, Vancouver, Canada, Institute for Work and Health, Toronto, Canada, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada and University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada)
Lori Francis (Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Canada)

International Journal of Workplace Health Management

ISSN: 1753-8351

Article publication date: 30 March 2010

1423

Abstract

Purpose

Consistent with previous research, the purpose of this paper is to propose that the presence of workplace‐based return‐to‐work strategies would reduce the duration of work disability. Moving beyond existing research, the paper further seeks to propose that these strategies would also enhance mental health and affective commitment among injured workers. In addition, the paper aims to introduce interactional justice – injured workers' perceptions of the interpersonal and informational fairness of the person most responsible for their return‐to‐work process – to the return‐to‐work context, and to hypothesize that these factors would also contribute to the explanation of these outcomes.

Design/methodology/approach

Within five weeks of their injury, telephone interviews were conducted with 166 workers from the province of Ontario, Canada, who had experienced musculoskeletal lost‐time workplace injuries.

Findings

Multiple regression analyses indicate that certain workplace‐based strategies were associated with days on compensation, self‐reported days absent, and depressive symptoms, but not affective commitment. Further, as hypothesized, interactional justice accounted for additional variance explained in self‐reported days absent, depressive symptoms, and affective commitment. Interactional justice did not explain additional variance in days on compensation.

Practical implications

The findings have implications for employers engaged in return‐to‐work practices and researchers studying return to work. Both should address not only the workplace‐based strategies used, but also the way in which these strategies are implemented.

Originality/value

The paper replicates previous empirical work on return‐to‐work interventions and demonstrates the importance of the presence of workplace‐based strategies in explaining the duration of work disability.

Keywords

Citation

Gail Hepburn, C., Franche, R. and Francis, L. (2010), "Successful return to work: the role of fairness and workplace‐based strategies", International Journal of Workplace Health Management, Vol. 3 No. 1, pp. 7-24. https://doi.org/10.1108/17538351011031902

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2010, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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