Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The investigators will learn from the study whether actors playing the roles of patients (standardized patients) can help primary care and urgent care clinicians develop skill in offering watchful waiting to patients with acute low back pain as a means of averting low-value spinal imaging. Using patient and physician feedback, this study will refine and evaluate -- in a controlled experiment -- a simulated standardized patient intervention to enhance primary care physician use of watchful waiting when patients request low-value spinal imaging. The long-term goal of this study is to discover communication strategies primary care physicians can use to avert costly, potentially harmful testing while maintaining the patient-doctor relationship.


Clinical Trial Description

Overutilization is increasingly viewed within the framework of patient safety. In primary care, patients with acute low back pain frequently request diagnostic imaging, and primary and urgent care clinicians feel pressure to acquiesce to such requests to sustain patient trust and satisfaction. Spinal imaging in patients with acute low back pain poses risks from diagnostic evaluation of false-positive findings, patient labeling and anxiety, and unnecessary treatment (including spinal surgery) with potential downstream complications. Watchful waiting advice has been found an effective strategy to reduce low-value treatment (e.g., pediatric ear infections), and some evidence suggests a watchful waiting approach would be acceptable to many patients requesting tests. Meanwhile, psychological theory suggests that physician messages could be tailored to magnify patient acceptance of a watchful waiting strategy. The investigators will refine and evaluate a novel simulated intervention using standardized patients (SPs) -- or actors playing the roles of patients - to teach clinicians to endorse a watchful waiting approach when patients request low-value spinal imaging for low back pain. Specific aims are: Aim 1: To use key informant interviews of front-line clinicians and focus groups with primary care patients to refine a theory-informed standardized patient-based intervention designed to teach practicing clinicians how to advise watchful waiting when patients request low-value spinal imaging for low back pain. Aim 2: To test the effectiveness of standardized patient instructor (SPI)-delivered clinician training in the use of watchful waiting in a randomized clinical trial. The investigators hypothesize that the intervention will: a) reduce rates of low-value spinal imaging among actual patients with acute back pain seen by clinicians post-intervention (adjusting for pre-trial rates); b) increase clinician advice to pursue watchful waiting during a followup visit with an unannounced SP; c) increase clinician self-reported use and efficacy of advising watchful waiting with actual low back pain patients; and d) have no adverse impact on actual patient trust and satisfaction with physicians; and e) reduce rates of neck imaging (among neck pain patients) and overall diagnostic testing (among all adult patients). Aim 3: To assess whether the intervention effects generalize to other low-value imaging tests and diagnostic tests in general. The investigators hypothesize that the SP intervention will: a) decrease rates of neck imaging among actual patients with neck pain seen by study clinicians during the follow-up period (adjusting for baseline rates); b) decrease rates of overall diagnostic tests among all adult patient seen by study clinicians during the follow-up period (adjusting for baseline rates); and c) increase PCP self-reported use and efficacy of advising watchful waiting for patients with neck pain, other musculoskeletal pain, and other non-musculoskeletal somatic complaints. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04255199
Study type Interventional
Source University of California, Davis
Contact
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date October 21, 2020
Completion date December 31, 2023

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03916705 - Thoraco-Lumbar Fascia Mobility N/A
Completed NCT04007302 - Modification of the Activity of the Prefrontal Cortex by Virtual Distraction in the Lumbago N/A
Completed NCT03273114 - Cognitive Functional Therapy (CFT) Compared With Core Training Exercise and Manual Therapy (CORE-MT) in Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain N/A
Recruiting NCT03600207 - The Effect of Diaphragm Muscle Training on Chronic Low Back Pain N/A
Completed NCT04284982 - Periodized Resistance Training for Persistent Non-specific Low Back Pain N/A
Recruiting NCT05600543 - Evaluation of the Effect of Lumbar Belt on Spinal Mobility in Subjects With and Without Low Back Pain N/A
Withdrawn NCT05410366 - Safe Harbors in Emergency Medicine, Specific Aim 3
Completed NCT03673436 - Effect of Lumbar Spinal Fusion Predicted by Physiotherapists
Completed NCT02546466 - Effects of Functional Taping on Static Postural Control in Patients With Non-specific Chronic Low Back Pain N/A
Completed NCT00983385 - Evaluation of Effectiveness and Tolerability of Tapentadol Hydrochloride in Subjects With Severe Chronic Low Back Pain Taking Either WHO Step I or Step II Analgesics or no Regular Analgesics Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05156242 - Corticospinal and Motor Behavior Responses After Physical Therapy Intervention in Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain. N/A
Recruiting NCT04673773 - MY RELIEF- Evidence Based Information to Support People Aged 55+ Years Living and Working With Persistent Low-back Pain. N/A
Completed NCT06049251 - ELDOA Technique Versus Lumbar SNAGS With Motor Control Exercises N/A
Completed NCT06049277 - Mulligan Technique Versus McKenzie Extension Exercise Chronic Unilateral Radicular Low Back Pain N/A
Completed NCT04980469 - A Study to Explore the Effect of Vitex Negundo and Zingiber Officinale on Non-specific Chronic Low Back Pain Due to Sedentary Lifestyle N/A
Completed NCT04055545 - High Intensity Interval Training VS Moderate Intensity Continuous Training in Chronic Low Back Pain Subjects N/A
Recruiting NCT05944354 - Wearable Spine Health System for Military Readiness
Recruiting NCT05552248 - Assessment of the Safety and Performance of a Lumbar Belt
Completed NCT05801588 - Participating in T'ai Chi to Reduce Back Pain and Improve Quality of Life N/A
Completed NCT05811143 - Examining the Effects of Dorsal Column Stimulation on Pain From Lumbar Spinal Stenosis Related to Epidural Lipomatosis.