Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Timo Aro is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Timo Aro.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1995

The Treatment of Acute Low Back Pain — Bed Rest, Exercises, or Ordinary Activity?

Antti Malmivaara; Unto Häkkinen; Timo Aro; Maj-Len Heinrichs; Liisa Koskenniemi; Eeva Kuosma; Seppo Lappi; Raili Paloheimo; Carita Servo; Vesa Vaaranen; Sven Hernberg

BACKGROUND Bed rest and back-extension exercises are often prescribed for patients with acute low back pain, but the effectiveness of these two competing treatments remains controversial. METHODS We conducted a controlled trial among employees of the city of Helsinki, Finland, who presented to an occupational health care center with acute, nonspecific low back pain. The patients were randomly assigned to one of three treatments: bed rest for two days (67 patients), back-mobilizing exercises (52 patients), or the continuation of ordinary activities as tolerated (the control group; 67 patients). Outcomes and costs were assessed after 3 and 12 weeks. RESULTS After 3 and 12 weeks, the patients in the control group had better recovery than those prescribed either bed rest or exercises. There were statistically significant differences favoring the control group in the duration of pain, pain intensity, lumbar flexion, ability to work as measured subjectively, the Oswestry back-disability index, and number of days absent from work. Recovery was slowest among the patients assigned to bed rest. The overall costs of care did not differ significantly among the three groups. CONCLUSIONS Among patients with acute low back pain, continuing ordinary activities within the limits permitted by the pain leads to more rapid recovery than either bed rest or back-mobilizing exercises.


Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 2007

Self-reported health problems and sickness absence in different age groups predominantly engaged in physical work

Simo Taimela; Esa Läärä; Antti Malmivaara; Jaakko Tiekso; Harri Sintonen; Selina Justen; Timo Aro

Objectives: To study the associations between self-reported health problems and sickness absence from work. Methods: The results of a questionnaire survey were combined with archival data of sickness absence of 1341 employees 88 males; 62 blue-collar in the construction, service and maintenance work within one corporation in Finland. Sex, age and occupational grading were controlled as confounders. A zero-inflated negative binomial ZINB regression model was used in the statistical analysis of sickness absence data. Results: The prevalence of self-reported health problems increased with age, from 23 in 1830-year-olds to 54 in 5561-year-olds. However, in those aged 1830 years, 71 had been absent from work and in those aged 5561 years this proportion was 53. When health problems and occupational grading were accounted for in the ZINB model, age as such was not associated with the number of days on sick leave, but the young workers still had higher propensity for any sickness absence than the old. Self-rated future working ability and musculoskeletal impairment were strong determinants of sickness absence. Among those susceptible to taking sick leave, the estimated mean number of absence days increased by 14 for each rise of 1 unit of the impairment score scale 010. Conclusions: Young subjects had surprisingly high probability for sickness absence although they reported better health than their older colleagues. A higher total count of absence days was found among subjects reporting health problems and poorer working ability, regardless of age, sex and occupational grade. These findings have implications for both management and the healthcare system in the prevention of work disability.


Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 2008

The effectiveness of two occupational health intervention programmes in reducing sickness absence among employees at risk. Two randomised controlled trials.

Simo Taimela; Antti Malmivaara; Selina Justen; Esa Läärä; Harri Sintonen; Jaakko Tiekso; Timo Aro

Objectives: To evaluate the effectiveness of two occupational health intervention programmes, both compared with usual care. Methods: Based on a health survey, 1341 employees (88% males) in construction, service and maintenance work were classified into three groups: “low risk” (n = 386), “intermediate risk” (n = 537) and “high risk” (n = 418) of sickness absence. Two separate randomised trials were performed in the groups “high risk” and “intermediate risk”, respectively. Those high risk subjects that were allocated to the intervention group (n = 209) were invited to occupational health service for a consultation. The intervention included, if appropriate, a referral to specialist treatment. Among the intermediate risk employees those in the intervention group (n = 268) were invited to call a phone advice centre. In both trials the control group received usual occupational health care. The primary outcome was sickness absence during a 12-month follow-up (register data). Results: The high risk group, representing 31% of the cohort, accounted for 62% of sickness absence days. In the trial for the high risk group the mean sickness absence was 30 days in the usual care group and 19 days in the intervention group; the mean difference was 11 days (95% CI 1 to 20 days). In the trial for the intermediate risk group the mean sickness absence was 7 days in both arms (95% CI of the mean difference –2.3 to 2.4 days). Conclusions: The identification of high risk of work disability was successful. The occupational health intervention was effective in controlling work loss to a degree that is likely to be economically advantageous within the high risk group. The phone advice intervention for the intermediate risk group was not effective in controlling work loss primarily due to poor adherence.


BMJ | 1989

The accident at Chernobyl and outcome of pregnancy in Finland

Tiina Harjulehto; Timo Aro; H. Rita; T. Rytömaa; Lauri Saxén

OBJECTIVE--To evaluate the outcome of pregnancy in Finnish women after the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on 26 April 1986. DESIGN--Geographic and temporal cohort study. SETTING--Finland divided into three zones according to amount of radioactive fallout. SUBJECTS--All children who were exposed to radiation during their fetal development. Children born before any effects of the accident could be postulated--that is, between 1 January 1984 and 30 June 1986--served as controls. INTERVENTIONS--Children were divided into three temporal groups: controls, children who were expected to be born in August to December 1986, and children who were expected to be born in February to December 1987. They were also divided, separately, into three groups according to the three geographic zones. END POINT--Incidence of congenital malformations, preterm births, and perinatal deaths. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS--There were no significant differences in the incidence of malformations or perinatal deaths among the three temporal and three geographic groups. A significant increase in preterm births occurred among children who were exposed to radiation during the first trimester whose mothers lived in zones 2 and 3, where the external dose rate and estimated surface activity of caesium-137 were highest. CONCLUSIONS--The results suggest that the amount of radioactive fallout that Finnish people were exposed to after the accident at Chernobyl was not high enough to cause fetal damage in children born at term. The higher incidence of premature births among malformed children in the most heavily polluted areas, however, remains unexplained.


Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 2008

An occupational health intervention programme for workers at high risk for sickness absence. Cost effectiveness analysis based on a randomised controlled trial.

Simo Taimela; Selina Justen; Pasi Aronen; Harri Sintonen; Esa Läärä; Antti Malmivaara; Jaakko Tiekso; Timo Aro

Objectives: To determine whether, from a healthcare perspective, a specific occupational health intervention is cost effective in reducing sickness absence when compared with usual care in occupational health in workers with high risk of sickness absence. Methods: Economic evaluation alongside a randomised controlled trial. 418 workers with high risk of sickness absence from one corporation were randomised to intervention (n = 209) or to usual care (n = 209). The subjects in the intervention group were invited to occupational health service for a consultation. The intervention included, if appropriate, a referral to specialist treatment. Register data of sickness absence were available for 384 subjects and questionnaire data on healthcare costs from 272 subjects. Missing direct total cost data were imputed using a two-part regression model. Primary outcome measures were sickness absence days and direct healthcare costs up to 12 months after randomisation. Cost effectiveness (CE) was expressed as an incremental CE ratio, CE plane and CE acceptability curve with both available direct total cost data and missing total cost data imputed. Results: After one year, the mean of sickness absence was 30 days in the usual care group (n = 192) and 11 days less (95% CI 1 to 20 days) in the intervention group (n = 192). Among the employees with available cost data, the mean days of sickness absence were 22 and 24, and the mean total cost €974 and €1049 in the intervention group (n = 134) and in the usual care group (n = 138), respectively. The intervention turned out to be dominant—both cost saving and more effective than usual occupational health care. The saving was €43 per sickness absence day avoided with available direct total cost data, and €17 with missing total cost data imputed. Conclusions: One year follow-up data show that occupational health intervention for workers with high risk of sickness absence is a cost effective use of healthcare resources.


Mutation Research\/dnaging | 1992

The accident at Chernobyl and trisomy 21 in Finland

Tiina Harjulehto-Mervaala; Riitta Salonen; Timo Aro; Lauri Saxén

Our objective was to explore whether the radiation fallout in Finland after the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in April 1986 led to an increased incidence of trisomy 21. In this geographic and temporal cohort study, the country was divided into three zones according to the amounts of radioactive fallout and internal radiation caused by two cesium isotopes. The 518 cytologically verified cases of trisomy 21 were divided into a control group (conceived before the accident), and a study group of children whose expected dates of birth were in the post-accident years 1987-1988, i.e., pregnancies commenced after May 1986. The cases were also divided into three subgroups according to the zones of radiation. There were no significant differences in prevalence of trisomy 21 between the control and study groups nor between the three zones in spite of the significant differences in the levels of radiation and in the body burden that prevailed throughout the study period. Power estimates showed that in the two zones of lower radiation, an increase of 0.5% in the prevalence would have been detected with a power of 0.85, and in the somewhat smaller zone of the highest radiation, with a power of 0.70. The study lends no further support to the view that the low radiation fallout in western Europe would have been causally associated with trisomy 21.


The Lancet | 1989

Congenital malformations and oral poliovirus vaccination during pregnancy.

Tiina Harjulehto; Tapani Hovi; Timo Aro; Lauri Saxén

In February, 1985, mass vaccination with live oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) was started during a poliomyelitis outbreak in Finland. Pregnant women were advised to take the vaccination. Judged as the rate of reported malformations, OPV during early pregnancy had no harmful effects on fetal development.


Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica | 1995

Oral poliovirus vaccination and pregnancy complications.

Tina Harjulehto-Mervaala; Tapani Hovi; Timo Aro; Harri Saxen; Vilho Hiilesmaa

Background. To determine whether the effect of live attenuated oral polio virus vaccine given to pregnant women increases pregnancy complications.


Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health | 2002

Effectiveness of a worksite exercise program with respect to perceived work ability and sick leaves among women with physical work.

Eija Nurminen; Antti Malmivaara; Juhani Ilmarinen; Pekka Ylöstalo; Pertti Mutanen; Guy Ahonen; Timo Aro


International Journal of Epidemiology | 1982

Incidence and Secular Trends of Congenital Limb Defects in Finland

Timo Aro; Olli P. Heinonen; Lauri Saxén

Collaboration


Dive into the Timo Aro's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antti Malmivaara

National Institute for Health and Welfare

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tapani Hovi

University of Helsinki

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eeva Kuosma

University of Helsinki

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Harri Saxen

University of Helsinki

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Heikki Katila

Helsinki University Central Hospital

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge