Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) is a broad concept that includes a range of ideas and practices that help people enter into, stay at and return to work. The Workplace Health Partnership (WHP) considers VR as a critical element in the recovery processes for the working age population in the UK and this viewpoint is echoed by the Government (DH. DWP., Nov, 2008) and health professionals’ organisations (Health Work and Wellbeing, March, 2008).
Government, Insurers, Employers (both public and private sector), Personal Injury and Employment Law lawyers are now beginning to recognise VR as an important early intervention tool in reintegrating people back into employment; in some cases re-entering the labour market a number of years after exiting it.
VR improves a person’s overall quality of life and it is now known that being in work also has significant health benefits (Waddell, 2008).
It is not only financially that people are better off the sooner they get back to work. There are also important psycho-social benefits in:
1. helping to maintain the family unit in as normal a pattern as is possible and,
2. keeping open communication with an employer as the journey through a return to work process can be lengthy and disruptive to daily routines and intrusive into personal matters.
There is a need to ensure that VR values and principles, relative to the situation of any individual, are understood by all involved in assisting that person to enter into, stay in and/or return to work. Many people, perhaps far more than we currently recognise or accept, can make a successful managed return to work with their health conditions.