Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine (Apr 2021)

Evidence needs, training demands, and opportunities for knowledge translation in social security and insurance medicine: A European survey

  • Regina Kunz,
  • Adrian Verbel,
  • Rebecca Weida-Cuignet,
  • Jan L. Hoving,
  • Susanne Weinbrenner,
  • Emilie Friberg,
  • Andreas Klipstein,
  • Christiaan Van Haecht,
  • Ilona Autti-Rämö,
  • Nadine Agosti,
  • Sergio Vargas-Prada,
  • Robert Kneepkens,
  • Gert Lindenger,
  • Wout de Boer,
  • Frederieke G. Schaafsma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-2821
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 53, no. 4
p. jrm00179

Abstract

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Objective: To perform a European survey of the evidence needs and training demands of insurance medicine professionals related to professional tasks and evidence-based practice. Design: International survey. Subjects: Professionals working in insurance medicine. Methods: Experts designed an online questionnaire including 26 questions related to 4 themes: evidence needs; training demands; evidence-seeking behaviour; and attitudes towards evidence-based medicine. Descriptive statistics were presented by country/conference and the total sample. Results: A total of 782 participants responded. Three-quarter of participants experienced evidence needs at least once a week, related to mental disorders (79%), musculoskeletal disorders (67%) and occupational health (65%). Guidelines (76%) and systematic reviews (60%) were the preferred types of evidence and were requested for assessment of work capacity (64%) and prognosis of return-to-work (51%). Evidence-based medicine was thought to facilitate decision-making in insurance medicine (95%). Fifty-two percent of participants felt comfortable finding, reading, interpreting, and applying evidence. Countries expressed similar needs for reviews on typical topics. Conclusion: This study reveals evidence gaps in key areas of insurance medicine, supporting the need for further research, guidelines and training in evidence-based insurance medicine. Importantly, insurance medicine professionals should recognize that evidence-based practice is crucial in producing high-quality assessments.

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