Lisa Holmlund (f.d Bergmark)

Lisa Holmlund (f.d Bergmark)

Assistant Professor
Visiting address: Alfred Nobels Allé 23, 14183 Huddinge
Postal address: H1 Neurobiologi, vårdvetenskap och samhälle, H1 Arbetsterapi Patomella, 171 77 Stockholm

About me

  • I am an assistant professor at the Division of Occupational Therapy, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences, and Society, Karolinska Institutet, where I conduct research and teach at the bachelor’s and master’s levels. I earned my doctoral degree in 2019 through my dissertation, 'Return to work: exploring paths toward work after spinal cord injury and designing a rehabilitation intervention.' 

  • In addition to my role within the Division of Occupational Therapy, I am an associated researcher at Uppsala University in the Department of Public Health and Caring Sciences, Public Health, Working Life and Rehabilitation. Additionally, I am engaged in research collaborations with the Division of Physiotherapy, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences, and Society, and the Unit of Intervention and Implementation Research for Worker Health, Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet. 
  • My background includes clinical experience as a registered Occupational Therapist specialising in rehabilitation after spinal cord injury. I am keenly interested in issues related to everyday participation, including work. This is why I actively participate in the research and development initiatives of Rehab Station Stockholm and hold a position as a board member of the Nordic Spinal Cord Society (NoSCoS).

Research

  • My research area focuses on health and everyday life, particularly intervention and implementation research for occupational health. The research takes place at the intersection of science and practice. Below is an overview of projects and collaborations.

    ReWork-SCI
    My thesis, titled ‘Return to work: exploring paths toward work after spinal cord injury and designing a rehabilitation intervention’, was funded by the Doctoral School in Health Care Sciences and doctoral grants from the Norrbacka Eugenia Foundation. This work aimed to generate knowledge about return to work and to develop and evaluate the design and feasibility of a complex intervention that can complement the current return-to-work (RTW) systems. The findings illustrated the complexity and positioning of RTW within social, labour market, and societal contexts. Furthermore, the results showed fragmented support in RTW after SCI and the risk of absent or delayed RTW processes. The development of ReWork-SCI involves person-centred, structured, and coordinated support when returning to work. The intervention was feasible in a clinical context, but remodelling is necessary before evaluating its effectiveness. Further research aims to develop a new and adapted ReWork-SCI program and the prototype of program delivery for sustainable employment after spinal cord injury through co-creation is planned.

    During my postdoc studies at the Unit of Intervention and Implementation Research for Worker Health, Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, I was involved in the CORE and the PROSA project.

    CORE The project, was funded by AFA Insurance, and focused on facilitators, barriers, and ethical values related to the coordination of RTW among employees on sick leave due to common mental disorders (CMDs). The results demonstrated the need for detailed packaging of coordination, formalisation of coordinators' qualifications and levels of training, and acknowledgement of the role of organisational factors in implementing coordination. The project also highlighted ethical issues of unequal access and support in the coordination of RTW.

    PROSA In the context of my postdoc, I was awarded postdoctoral support from AFA Insurance for the project, "A problem-solving intervention to increase return to work among people on sick leave due to CMDs - effects on short-term sick leave, psychosocial factors, and balance in everyday life?" This project was conducted in collaboration with the University of Groningen, Professor Ute Bültmann, and researchers at the universities of Gävle and Gothenburg. The results showed that sick leave due to CMDs was understood as related to experiences of accumulated events situated in different social, cultural, and societal contexts of everyday life. Moreover, the findings showed that psychosocial work demands and work-to-home interference are associated with a longer time to RTW after sick leave due to CMDs. Overall, the results indicate the need for a continuous and transparent dialogue between employees and employers and that the influence of organisational culture and structure must be reviewed in accommodating employees on sick leave due to CMDs.

    Uppsala University, Public health, working life and rehabilitation
    As an associated researcher at Uppsala University, Department of Public Health and Caring Sciences, I am involved in two projects relating to prerequisites for increased inclusion and sustainability in working life for young adults with OCD and ADHD. These projects aim to a) investigate what characterises different patterns of work participation, sick leave, and unemployment in the case of OCD and ADHD and what role co-morbidity and gender have for this, and b) deepen the knowledge of individual and societal prerequisites for work entry and sustainable work participation.

    Division of Physiotherapy, Karolinska Institutet
    I participate in the Mobile Health to Promote Physical Activity in People Post-Stroke or Transient Ischemic Attack program. I have a primary role in qualitative methodology and methods for evaluating the program's feasibility. The program is based on an existing program (i-REBOUND – Let's get moving) developed in Australia. More information about the program can be found in the protocol, Thurston et al. 2023, "Mobile health to promote physical activity in people post-stroke or transient ischemic attack – study protocol for a feasibility randomised controlled trial.”

Teaching

  • I am actively teaching in Swedish and English at the bachelor's and master's levels. I am mainly involved in the Occupational Therapy Program, Karolinska Institutet. Among other activities, I am responsible for the course 1AR035, Participation and Environment, and the course 1AR037, Scientific Design and Methodology. At the advanced level, I am mainly involved as a supervisor of master's level theses. I have also been responsible for the course 4FH098, Introduction to Planning and Program Development, within the Master’s Programme in Public Health Sciences.

Articles

Employments

  • Assistant Professor, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Karolinska Institutet, 2022-2028

Degrees and Education

  • Degree Of Doctor Of Philosophy, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Karolinska Institutet, 2019
  • Master Of Medical Science, Karolinska Institutet, 2010

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