All Stories

  1. The relationship between work disability and subsequent suicide or self-harm: A scoping review
  2. Impact of legislative reform on benefit access and disability duration in workers’ compensation: an interrupted time series study
  3. Step-downs reduce workers compensation payments to encourage return to work. Are they effective?
  4. Psychological Distress in Workers’ Compensation Claimants: Prevalence, Predictors and Mental Health Service Use
  5. Injured worker experiences of insurance claim processes and return to work: a national, cross-sectional study
  6. Work absence following road traffic crash in Victoria, Australia: A population-based study
  7. Evaluating the success of legislative amendments designed to reduce work disability
  8. Patterns and Predictors of Return to Work After Major Trauma
  9. The impact of income support systems on healthcare quality and functional capacity in workers with low back pain: a realist review protocol
  10. Concerns About Claiming, Postclaim Support, and Return to Work Planning
  11. Work-related injury and disease in Australian road transport workers: A retrospective population based cohort study
  12. Increased Benefit Generosity and the Impact on Workers’ Compensation Claiming Behavior
  13. Factors Associated with Employer Support for Injured Workers During a Workers’ Compensation Claim
  14. Traumatic injury survivors’ perceptions of their future: a longitudinal qualitative study
  15. Australian General Practitioners’ and Compensable Patients: Factors Affecting Claim Management and Return to Work
  16. Differences Over Time in the Prognostic Effect of Return to Work Self-Efficacy on a Sustained Return to Work
  17. Work-related injury and illness among older truck drivers in Australia: A population based, retrospective cohort study
  18. Work absence due to compensable RTCs in Victoria, Australia
  19. Work Disability in Australia: An Overview of Prevalence, Expenditure, Support Systems and Services
  20. A population-based study of treated mental health and persistent pain conditions after transport injury
  21. Factors associated with graduated return to work following injury in a road traffic crash
  22. Age, sex, and the changing disability burden of compensated work-related musculoskeletal disorders in Canada and Australia
  23. Comparing time off work after work-related mental health conditions across Australian workers’ compensation systems: a retrospective cohort study
  24. Recovery Within Injury Compensation Schemes: A System Mapping Study
  25. Do Health Service Use and Return-to-Work Outcomes Differ with GPs’ Injured-Worker Caseload?
  26. Patterns and Predictors of Failed and Sustained Return-to-Work in Transport Injury Insurance Claimants
  27. Effectiveness of employer financial incentives in reducing time to report worker injury: an interrupted time series study of two Australian workers’ compensation jurisdictions
  28. Work-related injury and illness in the Victorian healthcare sector: a retrospective analysis of workers
  29. Early-Claim Modifiable Factors Associated With Return-to-Work Self-Efficacy Among Workers Injured at Work
  30. The nature and burden of occupational injury among first responder occupations: A retrospective cohort study in Australian workers
  31. Long-term health status and trajectories of seriously injured patients: A population-based longitudinal study
  32. Fear of (re)injury and return to work following compensable injury: qualitative insights from key stakeholders in Victoria, Australia
  33. The Effect of Self-Efficacy on Return-to-Work Outcomes for Workers with Psychological or Upper-Body Musculoskeletal Injuries: A Review of the Literature
  34. Family matters: compensable injury and the effect on family
  35. Effectiveness of Workplace Interventions in Return-to-Work for Musculoskeletal, Pain-Related and Mental Health Conditions: An Update of the Evidence and Messages for Practitioners
  36. Exploring the influence of compensable injury on recovery
  37. Stuck in the middle: The emotional labours of case managers in the personal injury compensation system
  38. Compensation Research Database: population-based injury data for surveillance, linkage and mining
  39. Psychological impact of injuries sustained in motor vehicle crashes: systematic review and meta-analysis
  40. Differences in perceived fairness and health outcomes in two injury compensation systems: a comparative study
  41. Does medical certification of workers with injuries influence patterns of health service use?
  42. General practitioners knowledge and management of whiplash associated disorders and post-traumatic stress disorder: implications for patient care
  43. Academic perspectives and experiences of knowledge translation: a qualitative study of public health researchers
  44. Does time off work after injury vary by jurisdiction? A comparative study of eight Australian workers' compensation systems
  45. Factors associated with sickness certification of injured workers by General Practitioners in Victoria, Australia
  46. Return to Work and Functional Outcomes After Major Trauma
  47. A return-to-work self-efficacy scale for workers with psychological or musculoskeletal work-related injuries
  48. Is clinician refusal to treat an emerging problem in injury compensation systems?: Table 1
  49. Return to work outcomes for workers with mental health conditions: A retrospective cohort study
  50. Organisational factors affecting policy and programme decision making in a public health policy environment
  51. Cognitive and physical symptoms of concussive injury in children: a detailed longitudinal recovery study
  52. General practitioners and sickness certification for injury in Australia
  53. Prescription opioid and benzodiazepine use after road traffic injury
  54. Procedural Justice and the Use of Independent Medical Evaluations in Workers’ Compensation
  55. Type, frequency and purpose of information used to inform public health policy and program decision-making
  56. Does Blame Impede Health Recovery After Transport Accidents?
  57. Gender differences in occupational injury incidence
  58. Uncomfortable Bedfellows: Employer Perspectives on General Practitioners’ Role in the Return-to-Work Process
  59. Developmental Trajectory of Information-Processing Skills in Children: Computer-Based Assessment
  60. Predicting research use in a public health policy environment: results of a logistic regression analysis
  61. Prescription Opioids for Occupational Injury: Results from Workers' Compensation Claims Records
  62. RESTORE: REcovery after Serious Trauma—Outcomes, Resource use and patient Experiences study protocol
  63. Examining the epidemiology of work-related traumatic brain injury through a sex/gender lens: analysis of workers’ compensation claims in Victoria, Australia
  64. The impacts of injury at the individual, community and societal levels: a systematic meta-review
  65. Healing or Harming? Healthcare Provider Interactions with Injured Workers and Insurers in Workers’ Compensation Systems
  66. Measuring use of research evidence in public health policy: a policy content analysis
  67. Interactions Between Injured Workers and Insurers in Workers’ Compensation Systems: A Systematic Review of Qualitative Research Literature
  68. Mental Health Claims Management and Return to Work: Qualitative Insights from Melbourne, Australia
  69. Factors influencing social and health outcomes after motor vehicle crash injury: an inception cohort study protocol
  70. Trends in Sickness Certification of Injured Workers by General Practitioners in Victoria, Australia
  71. Patterns of healthcare service utilisation following severe traumatic brain injury: An idiographic analysis of injury compensation claims data
  72. Sickness certification of workers compensation claimants by general practitioners in Victoria, 2003–2010
  73. Are the Predictors of Work Absence Following a Work-Related Injury Similar for Musculoskeletal and Mental Health Claims?
  74. Mild Cognitive Impairment
  75. How Well Do We Report on Compensation Systems in Studies of Return to Work: A Systematic Review
  76. Do claim factors predict health care utilization after transport accidents?
  77. Work disability after road traffic injury in a mixed population with and without hospitalisation
  78. Reduction in health service use for whiplash injury after motor vehicle accidents in 2000–2009: Results from a defined population
  79. The incidence and impact of recurrent workplace injury and disease: a cohort study of WorkSafe Victoria, Australia compensation claims
  80. Evaluation of a compensation claims management intervention for improving recovery from traumatic injury
  81. Health care utilisation following hospitalisation for transport-related injury
  82. Determinants of Physical Therapy Use by Compensated Workers with Musculoskeletal Disorders
  83. The Impact of Aging on Work Disability and Return to Work
  84. Information interventions for recovery following vehicle-related trauma to persons of working age: A systematic review of the literature
  85. Predictors of Sustained Return to Work After Work-Related Injury or Disease: Insights from Workers’ Compensation Claims Records
  86. Repeat workers' compensation claims: risk factors, costs and work disability
  87. Cognitive Assessment of a Trekking Expedition to 5100 m: A Comparison of Computerized and Written Testing Methods
  88. Validity of the CogState Brief Battery: Relationship to Standardized Tests and Sensitivity to Cognitive Impairment in Mild Traumatic Brain Injury, Schizophrenia, and AIDS Dementia Complex
  89. Sleep following sport-related concussions
  90. The nature of cognitive complaints in healthy older adults with and without objective memory decline
  91. Decline in verbal memory in non-demented older adults
  92. Cognitive testing in early-phase clinical trials: Development of a rapid computerized test battery and application in a simulated Phase I study
  93. Practice Effects Associated with the Repeated Assessment of Cognitive Function Using the CogState Battery at 10-minute, One Week and One Month Test-retest Intervals
  94. Does atypical antipsychotic medication improve executive function in schizophrenia?
  95. Concussion history is not a predictor of computerised neurocognitive performance * COMMENTARY
  96. Cognitive deterioration associated with an expedition in an extreme desert environment
  97. Does history of concussion affect current cognitive status?
  98. Mild memory impairment in healthy older adults is distinct from normal aging
  99. Cognition in the days following concussion: comparison of symptomatic versus asymptomatic athletes
  100. Value of neuropsychological testing after head injuries in football
  101. Repeated Assessment of Cognition in Children and the Measurement of Performance Change
  102. Fatigue-related impairment in the speed, accuracy and variability of psychomotor performance: comparison with blood alcohol levels
  103. Cognition in liver disease
  104. APOE influences on neuropsychological function after mild head injury: Within-person comparisons
  105. The cognitive sequelae of standard-dose adjuvant chemotherapy in women with breast carcinoma
  106. Can we manage sport related concussion in children the same as in adults?
  107. Statistical procedures for determining the extent of cognitive change following concussion
  108. Subtle Memory Decline over 12 Months in Mild Cognitive Impairment
  109. Psychometric issues associated with computerised neuropsychological assessment of concussed athletes
  110. Significant association between fluctuations in serum urate and high density lipoprotein cholesterol during exhaustive training
  111. Health effects of kava use in an eastern Arnhem Land Aboriginal community
  112. The effects of practice on the cognitive test performance of neurologically normal individuals assessed at brief test–retest intervals
  113. Saccade and Cognitive Function in Chronic Kava Users
  114. Computerised neuropsychological testing
  115. Saccade and cognitive impairment associated with kava intoxication
  116. CogSport: Reliability and Correlation with Conventional Cognitive Tests Used in Postconcussion Medical Evaluations
  117. Impairments of response conflict monitoring and resolution in schizophrenia
  118. Behavioral Characterization of Mild Cognitive Impairment
  119. Determining the extent of cognitive change after coronary surgery: a review of statistical procedures
  120. Selectively Impaired Associative Learning in Older People with Cognitive Decline
  121. Computerised cognitive assessment of athletes with sports related head injury
  122. Computerised cognitive assessment of concussed Australian Rules footballers
  123. Memory decline in healthy older people: Implications for identifying mild cognitive impairment
  124. The neuropsychology of preclinical Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment
  125. Spatiotemporal distribution of facilitation and inhibition of return arising from the reflexive orienting of covert attention.
  126. Norms and the effects of demographic variables on a neuropsychological battery for use in healthy ageing Australian populations