Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Occupational balance, quality of life, occupational performance and disease-related factors in people with multiple sclerosis. : A case-control study.

Ortiz-Rubio, Araceli ; Månsson Lexell, Eva LU orcid ; Håkansson, Carita LU orcid and A, Navas-Otero (2026) In Australian Occupational Therapy Journal 73(1).
Abstract
Importance: Multiple sclerosis is a chronic neurological progressive disease that can lead to different impairments. It may also impact individuals' quality of life and daily living, including occupational performance and occupational balance. However, occupational balance has not been thoroughly described in this population. Objective: This study aimed to assess occupational balance in a sample of adults with multiple sclerosis, in comparison with a healthy control group. Design: A descriptive case–control study was carried out. Adults with multiple sclerosis were matched by sex and age with a healthy control group. Setting: The study was conducted in a community setting. Participants: A total of 122 participants (61 adults with mulitple... (More)
Importance: Multiple sclerosis is a chronic neurological progressive disease that can lead to different impairments. It may also impact individuals' quality of life and daily living, including occupational performance and occupational balance. However, occupational balance has not been thoroughly described in this population. Objective: This study aimed to assess occupational balance in a sample of adults with multiple sclerosis, in comparison with a healthy control group. Design: A descriptive case–control study was carried out. Adults with multiple sclerosis were matched by sex and age with a healthy control group. Setting: The study was conducted in a community setting. Participants: A total of 122 participants (61 adults with mulitple sclerosis and 61 healthy controls) were included in this study. Outcomes and Measures: The following aspects were assessed: occupational balance, disease-related factors including disability and symptom severity, occupational performance, and quality of life total score and visual analogue scale. Consumer and Community Involvement: Consumer and community members were not involved in the development or implementation of research or writing of this manuscript. Results: Both groups had similar occupational balance total scores (p = 0.05), except for two items where the multiple sclerosis group rated lower on ‘balance between obligatory/voluntary occupations’ (p = 0.002) and ‘balance between energy-giving/energy-taking occupations’ (p = 0.01). A negative relationship was found between low disease severity and high occupational balance and between high health-related quality of life, high occupational performance, and high occupational balance. Conclusions and Relevance: No differences between groups were found in OB, but the MS group experienced more problems with some items. Adults living with multiple sclerosis for many years may adapt by altering their roles, routines, and daily priorities, which may explain why occupational balance was similar between the groups. Occupational balance is a core concept related to all the measures in this study and is thus important to address. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)

Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Australian Occupational Therapy Journal
volume
73
issue
1
article number
e70062
publisher
Australian Association of occupational therapists
external identifiers
  • scopus:105026224138
ISSN
1440-1630
DOI
10.1111/1440-1630.70062
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
b8bdab9d-912d-4e38-854c-09a3a1f9696d
date added to LUP
2026-03-08 16:25:43
date last changed
2026-03-09 08:33:16
@article{b8bdab9d-912d-4e38-854c-09a3a1f9696d,
  abstract     = {{Importance: Multiple sclerosis is a chronic neurological progressive disease that can lead to different impairments. It may also impact individuals' quality of life and daily living, including occupational performance and occupational balance. However, occupational balance has not been thoroughly described in this population. Objective: This study aimed to assess occupational balance in a sample of adults with multiple sclerosis, in comparison with a healthy control group. Design: A descriptive case–control study was carried out. Adults with multiple sclerosis were matched by sex and age with a healthy control group. Setting: The study was conducted in a community setting. Participants: A total of 122 participants (61 adults with mulitple sclerosis and 61 healthy controls) were included in this study. Outcomes and Measures: The following aspects were assessed: occupational balance, disease-related factors including disability and symptom severity, occupational performance, and quality of life total score and visual analogue scale. Consumer and Community Involvement: Consumer and community members were not involved in the development or implementation of research or writing of this manuscript. Results: Both groups had similar occupational balance total scores (p = 0.05), except for two items where the multiple sclerosis group rated lower on ‘balance between obligatory/voluntary occupations’ (p = 0.002) and ‘balance between energy-giving/energy-taking occupations’ (p = 0.01). A negative relationship was found between low disease severity and high occupational balance and between high health-related quality of life, high occupational performance, and high occupational balance. Conclusions and Relevance: No differences between groups were found in OB, but the MS group experienced more problems with some items. Adults living with multiple sclerosis for many years may adapt by altering their roles, routines, and daily priorities, which may explain why occupational balance was similar between the groups. Occupational balance is a core concept related to all the measures in this study and is thus important to address.}},
  author       = {{Ortiz-Rubio, Araceli and Månsson Lexell, Eva and Håkansson, Carita and A, Navas-Otero}},
  issn         = {{1440-1630}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  publisher    = {{Australian Association of occupational therapists}},
  series       = {{Australian Occupational Therapy Journal}},
  title        = {{Occupational balance, quality of life, occupational performance and disease-related factors in people with multiple sclerosis. : A case-control study.}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1440-1630.70062}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/1440-1630.70062}},
  volume       = {{73}},
  year         = {{2026}},
}