Cognitive impairments in former patients with work-related stress complaints – one year later

Anita Eskildsen, Lars Peter Andersen, Anders Degn Pedersen, Johan Hviid Andersen

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Patients on sick leave due to work-related stress often present with cognitive impairments. The aim of this prospective cohort study was to examine the long-term consequences of prolonged work-related stress in terms of cognitive functioning one year after initial professional care seeking. We tested a group of patients with work-related stress with a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery at two occasions, one year apart. At both time points, we compared the performance of patients with healthy controls matched pairwise on sex, age and length of education. This paper presents the results from the one-year follow-up. When adjusting for practice effects, patients improved on measures of prospective memory and processing speed. However, patients continued to perform worse than controls on all tests, though only half of the comparisons reached statistical significance. The effect sizes of the differences between the two groups at one-year follow-up were small to medium. In conclusion, former patients with prolonged work-related stress improved, but they continued to perform worse than controls after one year. In the acute phase, the largest impairments were related to executive function and mental speed but at follow-up memory impairments also became apparent.

Original languageEnglish
JournalStress
Volume19
Issue number6
Pages (from-to)559-566
ISSN1025-3890
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1. Nov 2016
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Neuropsychological test
  • cognitive deficits
  • executive function
  • follow-up
  • memory
  • occupational stress
  • processing speed burnout

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