| Literature DB >> 15345098 |
Elaine Hay1, Panos Barlas, Nadine Foster, Jonathan Hill, Elaine Thomas, Julie Young.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acupuncture is a popular non-pharmacological modality for treating musculoskeletal pain. Physiotherapists are one of the largest groups of acupuncture providers within the NHS, and they commonly use it alongside advice and exercise. Conclusive evidence of acupuncture's clinical effectiveness and its superiority over sham interventions is lacking. The Arthritis Research Campaign (arc) has funded this randomised sham-controlled trial which addresses three important questions. Firstly, we will determine the additional benefit of true acupuncture when used by physiotherapists alongside advice and exercise for older people presenting to primary care with knee pain. Secondly, we will evaluate sham acupuncture in the same way. Thirdly, we will investigate the treatment preferences and expectations of both the participants and physiotherapists participating in the study, and explore the effect of these on clinical outcome. We will thus investigate whether acupuncture is a useful adjunct to advice and exercise for treating knee pain and gain insight into whether this effect is due to specific needling properties. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15345098 PMCID: PMC520743 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-5-31
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Content of physiotherapist questionnaires
| Physiotherapist's information | - year qualified | |
| Use of acupuncture | - currently use it | <1 year, 1–3 years, 3–5 years, 5+ years |
| Beliefs about knee pain (section B) | adapted from [53] | 13 items on 7 point Likert scale: completely disagree to completely agree |
| Causes of knee problems | Illness Perceptions Questionnaire Revised (IPQ(R)) [54] | 1 dimension: causes |
| Beliefs and expectations about treatment | - most helpful treatments for managing chronic knee pain | OTC medication, prescribed medication, advice, exercise, acupuncture, rest |
| Therapists perception of patients' knee severity | 5 point Likert scale | |
| Therapists prediction of likely outcome of patient's knee problem | 5 point Likert scale | |
| Therapists treatment preference for the patient | advice and exercise, acupuncture, no preference | |
| Therapists expectation of treatment benefit for patient | - expectation of degree of improvement for the patient with each of the available treatments | 11 point NRS/ 4 point Likert scale |
Figure 1Placebo needle insertion
Content of baseline measures from self-completed questionnaire
| Bodily pain | - self-completed manikin | "In the past 4 weeks have you had pain that has lasted for one day or longer in any part of your body?" |
| Complaint specific functioning | Western Ontario and McMaster Universities OA index (WOMAC LK3.0) [61] | pain (0–20), stiffness (0–8), physical function (0–68) subscales |
| Participant-nominated principal functional problem | "Because of your knee, what one thing gives you the most problems?" | |
| Knee pain intensity and unpleasantness | 11 point NRS | |
| Illness perceptions | Illness Perceptions Questionnaire Revised (IPQ(R)) [54] | 9 dimensions: illness coherence, treatment control, personal control, timeline (acute/chronic), timeline (cyclical), consequences, emotional representation, identify, causes |
| Patient's self-efficacy | Arthritis Self-Efficacy Scale [62] | 11 items on 10 point NRS |
| Experiences and preferences for treatment | - previous experience with exercise | yes, no |
| Quality of life | EuroQol EQ-5D [63] | Summary score and 100 mm VAS score |
| Occupational characteristics | - current employment status | working full time, working part time, working in the home, unemployed/seeking employment, not working due to ill health/disability, student, retired |
| Demographic characteristics | - date of birth, gender | |
| Anthropometric characteristics | -self-reported height | |
Content of 2-week phone call measures
| Treatment compliance | - number of times visited trial physiotherapist so far | |
| Change in knee symptoms | - any change | yes, no |
| Knee pain intensity | 11 point numerical rating scale (NRS) | |
| Credibility of interventions | - confidence in received treatment | 5 point Likert scale |
| Experiences and expectations | - treatment met expectations | 5 point Likert scale |
| Treatment preference | - want to change treatment receiving | yes, no, not sure |
Content of follow-up measures from self-completed questionnaire collected at 6-weeks, 6- and 12-months
| Bodily pain | - self-completed manikin | "In the past 4 weeks have you had pain that has lasted for one day or longer in any part of your body?" |
| Complaint specific functioning | Western Ontario and McMaster Universities OA index (WOMAC LK3.0) [61] | pain (0–20), stiffness (0–8), physical function (0–68) subscales |
| Participant-nominated principal functional problem | "Because of your knee, what one thing gives you the most problems?" 11 point NRS | |
| Knee pain intensity and unpleasantness | 11 point NRS | |
| Bothersomeness of knee problem | 5 point scale: not at all, slightly, moderately, very much, extremely | |
| Illness perceptions | Illness Perceptions Questionnaire Revised (IPQ(R)) [54] | 9 dimensions: illness coherence, treatment control, personal control, timeline (acute/chronic), timeline (cyclical), consequences, emotional representation, identify, causes |
| Patient's self-efficacy | Arthritis Self-Efficacy Scale [62] | 11 items measuring patient's "certainty" |
| Global outcome | [67] | 6 point scale: completely recovered, much improved, improved, same, worse, much worse |
| Credibility of interventions | - confidence in received treatment | 5 point Likert scale |
| Side effects | - self-reported side effects | nausea/vomiting, drowsiness/sleepiness, bruising, fainting, headaches, soreness to joints |
| Health care utilisation for knee problem | - consultations | GP, district nurse, physiotherapist, hospital consultant, osteopath, chiropractor, homeopath, acupuncturist |
| Medication for knee problem | - prescribed/OTC medication | medicine name, dose, number taken |
| Experiences and preferences for treatment | - previous experience with exercise | yes, no |
| Quality of life | EuroQol EQ-5D [63] | Summary score and VAS score |
| Occupational characteristics | - current employment status | working full time, working part time, working in the home, unemployed/seeking employment, not working due to ill health/disability, student, retired |
| Demographic characteristics | - date of birth, gender | |