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Dive into the research topics where Christine A. Reid is active.

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Featured researches published by Christine A. Reid.


Rehabilitation Counseling Bulletin | 2011

Workplace Discrimination and the Perception of Disability.

William R. Draper; Christine A. Reid; Brian T. McMahon

This article documents the employment discrimination experienced by Americans “regarded as” disabled (but not medically verified as such), using the Integrated Mission System of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). Claimants who were perceived as disabled, as contrasted with those with documented disabilities, were more likely to file charges of discrimination based on the issues of discharge or hiring. Decisions by the EEOC in favor of claimants perceived to have disabilities disproportionately exceeded those in favor of claimants with documented disabilities. This finding lends support to the assertion that unconscious/implicit bias is persistent in the workplace.


Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation | 2015

Erratum to: Development and Validation of a Clinical Prediction Rule of the Return-to-Work Status of Injured Employees in Minnesota

A. Bentley Hankins; Christine A. Reid

Purpose Vocational rehabilitation services can be a valuable resource to injured employees at risk for sustaining permanent disability. The aim of this study was to develop and validate a predictive model of return-to-work (RTW) status at workers’ compensation claim closure that may assist rehabilitation counselors tasked with determining how to allocate such services. Methods A cross-sectional, retrospective study was conducted using data obtained from 15,372 workers’ compensation claims in Minnesota’s administrative claims database. The association between a set of 15 predictor variables representing medical and contextual factors and the RTW status as of claim closure of the accessible population was assessed using backward stepwise logistic regression. The most parsimonious set of variables that reliably predicted the outcome was selected as the optimal RTW model. This model was then internally validated via a split-dataset approach. Results Risk factors for failure to RTW by claim closure include the following: (1) attorney involvement; (2) higher level of permanent impairment (PI); (3) shorter job tenure; (4) lower pre-injury average weekly wage (AWW); (5) injury affecting the head and neck or the back; and (6) lower level of educational attainment. The optimal RTW model included four main effects (attorney involvement; severity of PI; age; job tenure) and three first-order interaction effects (pre-injury AWW × pre-injury industry; attorney involvement × severity of PI; attorney involvement × job tenure). When applied to the full dataset, the overall classification rate was 74.7 %. Conclusions This study’s optimal RTW model offers further support for evaluating disability from a biopsychosocial perspective. Given the model’s performance, it may be of value to those assessing rehabilitation potential within Minnesota’s, and possibly other, workers’ compensation system(s).


Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation | 2014

ADA Perceived Disability Claims: A Decision-Tree Analysis

William R. Draper; Carolyn E. Hawley; Brian T. McMahon; Christine A. Reid; Lara A. Barbir

Introduction The purpose of this study is to examine the possible interactions of predictor variables pertaining to perceived disability claims contained in a large governmental database. Specifically, it is a retrospective analysis of US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) data for the entire population of workplace discrimination claims based on the “regarded as disabled” prong of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) definition of disability. Methods The study utilized records extracted from a “master database” of over two million charges of workplace discrimination in the Integrated Mission System of the EEOC. This database includes all ADA-related discrimination allegations filed from July 26, 1992 through December 31, 2008. Chi squared automatic interaction detection (CHAID) was employed to analyze interaction effects of relevant variables, such as issue (grievance) and industry type. The research question addressed by CHAID is: What combination of factors are associated with merit outcomes for people making ADA EEOC allegations who are “regarded as” having disabilities? Results The CHAID analysis shows how merit outcome is predicted by the interaction of relevant variables. Issue was found to be the most prominent variable in determining merit outcome, followed by industry type, but the picture is made more complex by qualifications regarding age and race data. Although discharge was the most frequent grievance among charging parties in the perceived disability group, its merit outcome was significantly less than that for the leading factor of hiring.


Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy | 2018

Charting Our Course: Chaplain Documentation as a Performance Improvement Project

Alexander Tartaglia; Timothy Ford; Diane Dodd-McCue; Christine A. Reid; Carolyn E. Hawley; Alma Hassell

This article presents the results of a 30-month process improvement initiative examining the spiritual assessment documentation patterns of staff chaplains as well as CPE residents and interns at an academic medical center. Preliminary examination of chaplain documentation patterns led to a multidimensional intervention to address perceived documentation limitations and enhance reliability. The intervention resulted in positive changes in documentation patterns as assessed by an expert panel of experienced chaplains. Results offer opportunities for the use of electronic medical record documentation in training of chaplains.


NeuroRehabilitation | 2015

The importance of work or productive activity in life care planning and case management

Christine A. Reid; Susan Riddick-Grisham

Abstract INTRODUCTION: The importance of work or productive activity for the well-being, community integration, and quality of life of people living with disabilities is addressed, with implications for life care planning and case management. BACKGROUND: The role of work or productive activity in our society, and consequences of deprivation if rehabilitation services do not address vocational effects of disabilities, is explored. A continuum of productivity options is introduced; types of vocational rehabilitation assessment processes and interventions are described. PURPOSE: The role of vocational rehabilitation services in life care planning and case management is discussed, focusing on quality of life for people living with disabilities. CONCLUSION: Rehabilitation and health care professionals should understand the importance of work or other productive activity, and support the development of appropriate plans to address those needs among people who have disabilities.


Work-a Journal of Prevention Assessment & Rehabilitation | 2008

Workplace discrimination and autism spectrum disorders: The National EEOC Americans with Disabilities Act Research project

Todd A. Van Wieren; Christine A. Reid; Brian T. McMahon


Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation | 2012

Workplace discrimination and the record of disability

William R. Draper; Carolyn E. Hawley; Brian T. McMahon; Christine A. Reid


Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation | 2016

Measuring the Virtues and Character Traits of Rehabilitation Clients: The Adapted Inventory of Virtues and Strengths

Jeong Han Kim; Christine A. Reid; Brian T. McMahon; Rene Gonzalez; Dong-Hun Lee; Phillip S. Keck


Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation | 2000

The progression of employees with mental disorders through disability benefits systems

Christopher C. Wagner; Carolyn E. Hawley; Christine A. Reid


Work-a Journal of Prevention Assessment & Rehabilitation | 2009

Healthcare employees' progression through disability benefits.

Carolyn E. Hawley; Sebastian Diaz; Christine A. Reid

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Brian T. McMahon

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Carolyn E. Hawley

Virginia Commonwealth University

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William R. Draper

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Todd A. Van Wieren

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Alexander Tartaglia

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Alma Hassell

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Christopher C. Wagner

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Diane Dodd-McCue

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Jeong Han Kim

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Lara A. Barbir

Virginia Commonwealth University

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