Information and feedback to improve occupational physicians' reporting of occupational diseases: a randomised controlled trial

Annet F. Lenderink*, Dick Spreeuwers, Jac J. L. van der Klink, Frank J. H. van Dijk

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

8 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

To assess the effectiveness of supplying occupational physicians (OPs) with targeted and stage-matched information or with feedback on reporting occupational diseases to the national registry in the Netherlands.

In a randomized controlled design, 1076 OPs were divided into three groups based on previous reporting behaviour: precontemplators not considering reporting, contemplators considering reporting and actioners reporting occupational diseases. Precontemplators and contemplators were randomly assigned to receive stage-matched, stage-mismatched or general information. Actioners were randomly assigned to receive personalized or standardized feedback upon notification. Outcome measures were the number of OPs reporting and the number of reported occupational diseases in a 180-day period before and after the intervention.

Precontemplators were significantly more male and self-employed compared to contemplators and actioners. There was no significant effect of stage-matched information versus stage-mismatched or general information on the percentage of reporting OPs and on the mean number of notifications in each group. Receiving any information affected reporting more in contemplators than in precontemplators. The mean number of notifications in actioners increased more after personalized feedback than after standardized feedback, but the difference was not significant.

This study supports the concept that contemplators are more susceptible to receiving information but could not confirm an effect of stage-matching this information on reporting occupational diseases to the national registry.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)381-388
Number of pages8
JournalInternational Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health
Volume83
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr-2010

Keywords

  • Reporting
  • Occupational diseases
  • Psychological models
  • Information dissemination
  • Occupational health physicians
  • ADVERSE DRUG-REACTIONS
  • WORKERS-COMPENSATION
  • INTERVENTION
  • INJURY
  • SURVEILLANCE
  • BARRIERS
  • PROGRAM
  • DOCTORS
  • SMOKERS
  • ILLNESS

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