Low Back Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Prospective Cohort Study With 52 Weeks Follow-up Investigating the Influence of Disease Perception on Functional Outcome Among Patients Referred From General Practice to Secondary Care for Treatment of Low Back Pain.
The main purpose of the study is to investigate the importance of patients' beliefs regarding staying active despite low back pain, among patients referred from general practice to secondary care treatment in Denmark. It is hypothesised that patients believing that staying active will help them recover will have higher odds of a 30%-improvement in The Roland Morris Disability score after 52 weeks compared to patients disagreeing that staying active will lead to better recovery.
Background: According to international guidelines on low back pain (LBP), advice to stay
active should be provided from healthcare professionals to all patients with LBP. However,
provision of advice to stay active is reported to be diverse. Some primary care healthcare
professionals believe that avoidance of activities and work will help the patient recover.
Consequently some patients are not receiving optimal advice to stay active and may think that
inactivity will help them and consequently achieve less favourable treatment outcomes. Thus,
changing patients' beliefs are considered the key decisive factor to change actual behaviour,
and by that improve the functional ability of the patients. This should reduce primary health
care use and reduce referrals to the more expensive treatments in secondary care. The effect
of patients' beliefs on their functional outcomes has to our knowledge never been studied in
a population of patients with LBP being referred from primary care to secondary care
treatment.
Materials and Methods:
This is a prospective cohort study. Data is collected from a consecutive series of 800 adult
patients (18+), with low back pain as the dominant musculoskeletal complaint, referred from
general practices in Central Denmark Region to the Spine Centre at Silkeborg Regional
Hospital. Patients will be excluded in case of spinal fractures or malignancy.
All patients seen at the Spine Centre receive a digital letter with a link to an online
questionnaire to be completed approximately one week before their appointment at the Spine
Centre. The questionnaire contains questions about their back pain history, present pain (Low
Back Pain Rating Scale), disability (Rolland Morris Disability Questionnaire), quality of
life (EQ-5D), fear-avoidance questions (Örebro Musculoskeletal Pain Questionnaire), STarT
Back Screening tool, questions on average level of physical activity, beliefs about physical
activity in relation to back pain, advice received from health professionals about staying
active, and questions about employment and housing situation. For those accepting
participation the same questionnaire is forwarded by email 52 weeks after the initial visit
at the Spine Center.
Expected outcome and perspective: This study will bring knowledge about the associations
between patient's disease perceptions and beliefs about staying active despite pain and their
functional improvement. Furthermore, the study will clarify to what extent patients perceive
to have been given advice to stay active by a primary care health professional. Although this
study does not explain why some patients do not have guideline concordant beliefs, it will
help inform health care professionals in primary care about the possible potential of an
increased primary care attention towards the recommendation of staying active when patients
have LBP.
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