Prevention of hand eczema: effect of an educational program versus treatment as usual – results of the randomized clinical PREVEX trial

OBJECTIVE: Occupational hand eczema has adverse health and socioeconomic impacts for the afflicted individuals and society. Prevention and treatment strategies are needed. This study aimed to assess the effectiveness of an educational intervention on sickness absence, quality of life and severity of...

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Main Authors: Maja H Fisker, Niels Erik Ebbehøj, Søren Grove Vejlstrup, Jane Lindschou, Christian Gluud, Per Winkel, Jens Peter Bonde, Tove Agner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nordic Association of Occupational Safety and Health (NOROSH) 2018-03-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health
Subjects:
rct
Online Access: https://www.sjweh.fi/show_abstract.php?abstract_id=3687
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spelling doaj-f6c9ef33a7e44d1fb61edc4f4436e4782021-04-21T06:57:26ZengNordic Association of Occupational Safety and Health (NOROSH)Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health0355-31401795-990X2018-03-0144221221810.5271/sjweh.36873687Prevention of hand eczema: effect of an educational program versus treatment as usual – results of the randomized clinical PREVEX trialMaja H Fisker0Niels Erik EbbehøjSøren Grove VejlstrupJane LindschouChristian GluudPer WinkelJens Peter BondeTove AgnerDepartment of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Bispebjerg Hospital, 2400 Copenhagen NV, Denmark.OBJECTIVE: Occupational hand eczema has adverse health and socioeconomic impacts for the afflicted individuals and society. Prevention and treatment strategies are needed. This study aimed to assess the effectiveness of an educational intervention on sickness absence, quality of life and severity of hand eczema. METHODS: PREVEX (PreVention of EXema) is an individually randomized, parallel-group superiority trial investigating the pros and cons of one-time, 2-hour, group-based education in skin-protective behavior versus treatment as usual among patients with newly notified occupational hand eczema, with follow-up after one year. Co-primary outcomes were total sickness absence, health-related quality of life (HR-QoL), and self-reported severity of hand eczema. RESULTS: Patients (N=1668) with notified occupational skin diseases from July 2012 to November 2014 were invited to participate in the trial. Of these, 756 were randomized to the intervention (N= 376) versus control (N=380) group. The intervention group had 21% fewer sickness absence days compared with the control group [95% confidence interval (CI) -55–40%, P=0.43]. We found no significant difference in the change of HR-QoL for the intervention compared with the control group (4% lower in the intervention group, 95% CI -18–13%, P=0.67). The ordinal odds of scoring worse on self-reported hand eczema severity was 15% lower in the intervention compared with the control group (95% CI -39–18%, P=0.34). Post-hoc sub-group analyses indicated that the effect of the intervention on severity differed between occupations, being detrimental to healthcare workers and beneficial in all other occupations. CONCLUSION: The educational skincare program had no marked effect on the primary outcomes sickness absence, HR-QoL, and severity of hand eczema when compared with treatment as usual. https://www.sjweh.fi/show_abstract.php?abstract_id=3687 treatment as usualprevex trialclinical trialhand dermatitisskincarehand eczematrialdermatitisinterventionrandomized controlled trialsecondary preventionrandomized clinical trialeczemaeducational programrct
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maja H Fisker
Niels Erik Ebbehøj
Søren Grove Vejlstrup
Jane Lindschou
Christian Gluud
Per Winkel
Jens Peter Bonde
Tove Agner
spellingShingle Maja H Fisker
Niels Erik Ebbehøj
Søren Grove Vejlstrup
Jane Lindschou
Christian Gluud
Per Winkel
Jens Peter Bonde
Tove Agner
Prevention of hand eczema: effect of an educational program versus treatment as usual – results of the randomized clinical PREVEX trial
Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health
treatment as usual
prevex trial
clinical trial
hand dermatitis
skincare
hand eczema
trial
dermatitis
intervention
randomized controlled trial
secondary prevention
randomized clinical trial
eczema
educational program
rct
author_facet Maja H Fisker
Niels Erik Ebbehøj
Søren Grove Vejlstrup
Jane Lindschou
Christian Gluud
Per Winkel
Jens Peter Bonde
Tove Agner
author_sort Maja H Fisker
title Prevention of hand eczema: effect of an educational program versus treatment as usual – results of the randomized clinical PREVEX trial
title_short Prevention of hand eczema: effect of an educational program versus treatment as usual – results of the randomized clinical PREVEX trial
title_full Prevention of hand eczema: effect of an educational program versus treatment as usual – results of the randomized clinical PREVEX trial
title_fullStr Prevention of hand eczema: effect of an educational program versus treatment as usual – results of the randomized clinical PREVEX trial
title_full_unstemmed Prevention of hand eczema: effect of an educational program versus treatment as usual – results of the randomized clinical PREVEX trial
title_sort prevention of hand eczema: effect of an educational program versus treatment as usual – results of the randomized clinical prevex trial
publisher Nordic Association of Occupational Safety and Health (NOROSH)
series Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health
issn 0355-3140
1795-990X
publishDate 2018-03-01
description OBJECTIVE: Occupational hand eczema has adverse health and socioeconomic impacts for the afflicted individuals and society. Prevention and treatment strategies are needed. This study aimed to assess the effectiveness of an educational intervention on sickness absence, quality of life and severity of hand eczema. METHODS: PREVEX (PreVention of EXema) is an individually randomized, parallel-group superiority trial investigating the pros and cons of one-time, 2-hour, group-based education in skin-protective behavior versus treatment as usual among patients with newly notified occupational hand eczema, with follow-up after one year. Co-primary outcomes were total sickness absence, health-related quality of life (HR-QoL), and self-reported severity of hand eczema. RESULTS: Patients (N=1668) with notified occupational skin diseases from July 2012 to November 2014 were invited to participate in the trial. Of these, 756 were randomized to the intervention (N= 376) versus control (N=380) group. The intervention group had 21% fewer sickness absence days compared with the control group [95% confidence interval (CI) -55–40%, P=0.43]. We found no significant difference in the change of HR-QoL for the intervention compared with the control group (4% lower in the intervention group, 95% CI -18–13%, P=0.67). The ordinal odds of scoring worse on self-reported hand eczema severity was 15% lower in the intervention compared with the control group (95% CI -39–18%, P=0.34). Post-hoc sub-group analyses indicated that the effect of the intervention on severity differed between occupations, being detrimental to healthcare workers and beneficial in all other occupations. CONCLUSION: The educational skincare program had no marked effect on the primary outcomes sickness absence, HR-QoL, and severity of hand eczema when compared with treatment as usual.
topic treatment as usual
prevex trial
clinical trial
hand dermatitis
skincare
hand eczema
trial
dermatitis
intervention
randomized controlled trial
secondary prevention
randomized clinical trial
eczema
educational program
rct
url https://www.sjweh.fi/show_abstract.php?abstract_id=3687
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