Chronic Low Back Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Non-specific Chronic Low Back Pain Patients' Expectations Toward Physiotherapy and Physiotherapists: An Interpretive Socio-anthropological Study on Ill Persons' Experience
Non-specific chronic low back pain guidelines recommend rehabilitation along with a
biopsychosocial approach. However, though psychological and social issues address important
needs of professionals and patients, they have been scarcely developed in this area so far.
Noteworthy, little is known about patients' expectations relative to physiotherapy for
chronic low back pain (CLBP), while professional recommendations advocate taking them into
consideration.
A study about patients' experience will provide knowledge about the ill person's perspective
and how the physiotherapists are perceived as well as the role attributed to them. The aim
of this study is, thus, to explore the experience of the patients suffering from CLBP in
order to highlight their expectations toward physiotherapy services and physiotherapists.
The investigators will apply a critically interpretive socio-anthropological approach based
on patients' interviews and observations in an intensive CLBP rehabilitation program. The
results will help improve the care patients receive by facilitating the integration of
biopsychosocial issues related to patient's expectations into the treatment.
INTRODUCTION
Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is defined as "pain and discomfort, localised below the costal
margin and above the inferior gluteal folds, with or without referred leg pain" persisting
for at least 12 weeks. It is classified as non-specific when "not attributable to a
recognisable, known specific pathology, disorder, radicular syndrome or cauda equina
syndrome". It is a very frequent condition, one year prevalence being around 25% for men and
35% for women. It can greatly alter functional capacity and quality of life. Including care,
sick leave and work loss, it accounts for most of the back pain related costs.
Recommended management of CLBP is multidisciplinary due to the biopsychosocial impact of
this condition. Most guidelines include the patient's education, advice to stay active,
anti-inflammatory and analgesic medication, exercise therapy, and spinal manipulation.
Multidisciplinary rehabilitation, adjunctive analgesics, and cognitive behavioural therapy
are recommended if the initial approach is not efficient. Self-management strategies,
self-monitoring of status, and decision-making are also promoted.
Physiotherapy plays a role in CLBP management, in collaboration with other health and social
professions. As defined by the World Confederation for Physical Therapy, "Physiotherapy
provides services to individuals and populations to develop, maintain and restore maximum
movement and functional ability throughout the lifespan. (…) Functional movement is central
to what it means to be healthy (…).This encompasses physical, psychological, emotional, and
social wellbeing
Local and international standards of physiotherapy practice advocate taking patients'
expectations into consideration. Physiotherapists are also advised to take patients
preferences into account, when applying evidence-based practice (EBP) guidelines. However,
knowledge about the expectations of patients toward physiotherapy is limited.
This research is conducted with an interdisciplinary approach. Indeed, it takes into account
both the physiotherapy and the anthropological discipline. Physiotherapists want to deepen
their comprehension of the patients' needs in order to take better care of them whereas
anthropologists are interested in the broader experience of chronic illness and in
understanding the relationship between cares and patients. With their concepts and
qualitative methods, the latter have relevant tools to answer the research question.
Expectations issues within the CLBP rehabilitation process
Commonly, expectations are understood as "a belief that someone will or should achieve
something". In the health field literature, the notion of expectation is often used,
although it is seldom defined. Nevertheless, three dimensions emerge from the literature on
CLBP patients' expectations: effectiveness of care (diagnosis, effective treatment, pain
relief), relational issues (understanding, partnership, be believed, be treated as a
person), and empowerment (self-management, exercise, advice, explanation, etc). In addition,
expectations appear to be influenced by the course, the prognosis and the outcome of the
rehabilitation.
CLBP patients are often dissatisfied with back pain rehabilitation. As pain relief is
slight, disappointment with outcome is frequent. Having a clear diagnosis is clearly
expected. Thus, additional medical investigations are frequently requested to find a cause
to the disease. The patients also have expectations with regard to the outcome. Health
professionals are expected to demonstrate communication skills, understand emotional and
physical impact, spend time with the patient, show respect and build a partnership. They are
also expected to understand the personal situation, demonstrate empowering skills, and adapt
their language.
The nature of CLBP thus puts health professionals in an uncomfortable position. The
diagnostic uncertainty and the limited effect of therapy challenge their competencies. The
professional recommendations advise to avoid complex investigations and to stay active
despite the pain. This position may be difficult to have when the patient wishes to obtain a
clear diagnosis or to be prescribed time to rest for example. Thus, unrecommended approaches
are sometimes implemented to maintain the relationship with the patient.
Patients' expectations of a diagnosis and a cure are in line with a biomedical approach,
while a biopsychosocial model applies to CLBP treatment. It requires subtle interaction to
bring the patient to consider that psychosocial issues influence pain and disability without
giving the impression that pain is "in the mind" or exaggerated. This is especially
difficult in a context where the person feels delegitimized. Indeed, disbelief and
delegitimization by health professionals are motives for dissatisfaction.
Unclear diagnosis and poor social recognition
In Social sciences, the few studies that have explored the experience of CLBP patients show
that, since they face long term diagnostic uncertainty, this places them in a liminal state
being both well and sick, and being neither. Struggling for a diagnosis is an important
source of strain added to the experience of pain, altered moods and functional limitations.
Medical validation of pain cannot be performed through medical imagery in non-specific CLBP,
as the relation between findings and pain is low. Following the anthropological distinction
between disease, illness and sickness, patients, find themselves with "illness" (their
subjective experience of suffering), but without "disease" (medical definition of the
affection) or "sickness" (social construction and recognition). Lack of clear body damage
explaining pain leads to an absence of social recognition as a sick person needing to be
supported by the society.
Living with CLBP: a biographical disruption
Chronic symptoms can lead to a feeling of hopelessness, depression, anger and a loss of self
and identity. The loss of social role, status and identity induced by chronic illness is
documented in medical socio-anthropology. As shown in socio-anthropological studies on
chronic illness, there is a biographical disruption when the illness appears. The CLBP
patient has to manage his life accounting for pain. Self-image is altered and a feeling of
self-discrepancy, i.e. a difference between ideal and perceived self, may be experienced.
Some patients feel that there are held responsible for their suffering, when physicians
situate the origin of pain "in the mind" in the absence of identified body damage. Patients
often consider that physicians don't admit the limitations of medicine. Persons in
unexplained pain, speak of solving the riddle which they can't resign to consider as
"imagined pain". They are often convinced of the concreteness of their pain, since "you
can't hurt this bad and there being nothing wrong". Some complain "having been let down" in
this quest and explain they had to cope on their own with their situation.
Although these studies show the importance of taking into account the lived situations and
trajectory of the ill persons since the beginning of the illness, they make little
articulation between these trajectories and ill persons' expectations towards caregivers. In
this study the investigators assume there are strong links between these aspects. For
instance, the duration of the illness, the level of disability, its impact on the quality of
life, the previous recourse to other therapists and treatments necessarily produce
variations in the patients' expectations towards the physiotherapists.
Research aims
The main aim of this study is to identify CLBP patients' expectations toward physiotherapy
and physiotherapists. The investigators will aim at providing a qualitative insight into the
factors influencing the expectations by relating them to the experience and elements of the
context in which they appear. The elements accounted for will include the representation of
CLBP, physiotherapy and its therapists, the illness trajectory, the socio-economic
characteristics, the techniques and the perceived relationship with the physiotherapists.
Expectations will be investigated at the beginning and the end of an intensive
rehabilitation program to seize how this experience answers and/or modifies the patient's
expectations.
Methodology
Design: individual interviews and observations
Interviews with patients and observations of the patient-physiotherapist interactions are
planned.
Interviews
Individual comprehensive interviews are a common method to provide accounts of the
experience of illness.
The investigators will use semi-structured interviews based on a guide of questions.
Interviews will be conducted by the anthropologists of the research team. Interviews will
last around 1 hour. They will take place at the ill person's home if he/she agrees.
At the beginning of the process, 4 pilot interviews and two individual sessions
(observations) will be run to refine questions and procedures, as well as adjust to
unplanned practical issues.
Two interviews will take place, one at the beginning of the rehabilitation program, and the
second at the end. Both interviews will be conducted by the same researcher.
Observations
With an aim of a triangulation of data, the interviews will be completed with observations
of the relationship between patients and physiotherapists.
The observations will take place in the back rehabilitation unit of the university hospital.
Patients will follow a 3 week intensive CLBP rehabilitation program.
Focus will be put on individual therapy sessions. More specifically, the first and the last
session of the program will be observed. The investigators will choose ten patients among
the twenty participants using the same purposive sampling process.
These observations will be conducted by the two anthropologists in the research team.
Following the observations, all members of the research team will meet for debriefing
sessions, to share visions between anthropologists and physiotherapists about the meaning of
the events. This will assure taking into account both socio-anthropological concepts and
physiotherapists' knowledge of the field in an interdisciplinary approach.
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Time Perspective: Prospective
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