• Spine · Aug 2011

    Comparative Study

    Legal sequelae of occupational back injuries: a longitudinal analysis of Missouri judicial records.

    • Raymond C Tait and John T Chibnall.
    • Department of Neurology & Psychiatry, Saint Louis University, MO, USA. taitrc@slu.edu
    • Spine. 2011 Aug 1; 36 (17): 140214091402-9.

    Study DesignTelephone survey and longitudinal analysis of judicial database for cohort of worker's compensation (WC) claimants in Missouri.ObjectiveTo compare legal difficulties experienced by African American and white WC claimants presettlement versus postsettlement.Summary Of Background DataRetrospective studies suggest that workers with occupational back injuries experience financial and personal duress after claim settlement. This study examined these issues by comparing financial and domestic court actions for the 5-year presettlement against 5-year postsettlement. Sociodemographic differences also were examined.MethodsMissouri judicial records were reviewed for African American (n = 580) and non-Hispanic white (n = 892) WC claimants to determine the frequency with which four types of cases occurred: general financial, domestic financial, residence financial, and domestic behavior. Average annual level of judicial activity during the 5 years before claim settlement was compared to activity for each of five postsettlement years; significance of change was evaluated with univariate and multivariate repeated measures analyses.ResultsStatistically significant (P < 0.001) postsettlement increases in legal cases were noted for each of the four categories of cases. There were significant interactions between race and time for general financial and domestic financial cases. A significant interaction between age and time occurred for general financial cases. Significant three-way interactions (race × income change × time) emerged for general and domestic financial cases.ConclusionThe results confirm that workers with occupational back injuries, especially African American and younger adults, encounter long-term financial and domestic duress that appears to escalate with each passing year after claim settlement. This pattern suggests that short-term studies underestimate postsettlement difficulties, particularly among selected demographic cohorts.

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