Wilson, J. B., Rábago, C. A., Hoppes, C. W., Harper, P. L., Gao, J., & Russell Esposito, E. (2021). Should I stay or should I go? Identifying intrinsic and extrinsic factors in the decision to return to duty following lower extremity injury. Military Medicine, 186(1), 430-439. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usaa350
The purpose of this study was to identify the intrinsic and extrinsic factors influencing patients and clinicians decision to return to duty after severe lower extremity trauma. Thirty-two service members with severe lower extremity trauma and 30 providers with at least two years’ experience caring for SMs with similar injuries participated focus groups. The authors reported that individual (health condition, personal traits, and career consideration), interpersonal (clinician’s impact, family influence, and peer influence), healthcare system (systems of care, transdisciplinary rehabilitation, and innovation availability), and institutional (policy, benefits, and unit/commander) themes emerged amongst SM patients and clinicians. Service members placed less emphasis on severity of injury and greater emphasis on system and policy barriers than did clinicians. Understanding the characterization and classification of these clinician and SM that influence the decision to RTD after severe lower extremity trauma will improve the efficacy of future rehabilitation efforts and clinical practice guidelines by providing the clinical team the barriers to patient success.