Literature DB >> 22379262

Client Education: Communicative Interaction between Physiotherapists and Clients with Subacute Low Back Pain in Private Practice.

Katherine Harman1, Raewyn Bassett, Anne Fenety, Alison M Hoens.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To explore, through focus-group interviews, client education provided by physiotherapists in private practice who treat injured workers with subacute low back pain (SA-LBP).
METHODS: Six focus-group interviews were held in the fall of 2006 to explore treatment practices of physiotherapists for this population. Each of the 44 physiotherapists who volunteered attended one of six regional sessions.
RESULTS: Three overarching themes emerged: the critical importance of education; education: a multidimensional concept; and the physiotherapist-client relationship. In this study, we found that education provides continuity by tying together the separate tasks occurring during one treatment session. Our participants said that time is of the essence in private practice and described how they provide education seamlessly, making this type of delivery efficient.
CONCLUSIONS: Education is a highly valued aspect of practice for physiotherapists. Verbal, tactile, and visual information obtained from the client as assessment and treatment progress is explored, expanded, and contextualized in conversation with the client. In a communicative, interactive process, client fears, other contextual information, and physiotherapist information about procedures and techniques, exercises, and anatomy are collaboratively interrelated.

Entities:  

Keywords:  client education; collaboration; physiotherapist–client relationship; physiotherapy; private practice; qualitative; subacute low back pain

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 22379262      PMCID: PMC3076921          DOI: 10.3138/ptc.2009-52P

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Physiother Can        ISSN: 0300-0508            Impact factor:   1.037


  43 in total

Review 1.  The interpretation of experience and its relationship to body movement: a clinical reasoning perspective.

Authors:  Ian Edwards; Mark Jones; Susan Hillier
Journal:  Man Ther       Date:  2005-12-15

2.  Can we screen for problematic back pain? A screening questionnaire for predicting outcome in acute and subacute back pain.

Authors:  S J Linton; K Halldén
Journal:  Clin J Pain       Date:  1998-09       Impact factor: 3.442

3.  The role of threat-expectancy in acute pain: effects on attentional bias, coping strategy effectiveness and response to pain.

Authors:  Alison Boston; Louise Sharpe
Journal:  Pain       Date:  2005-11-18       Impact factor: 6.961

4.  Health care providers' attitudes and beliefs about functional impairments and chronic back pain.

Authors:  J Rainville; D Bagnall; L Phalen
Journal:  Clin J Pain       Date:  1995-12       Impact factor: 3.442

5.  Amount of patient education in physical therapy practice and perceived effects.

Authors:  J E Gahimer; E Domholdt
Journal:  Phys Ther       Date:  1996-10

6.  A randomized controlled trial of intensive neurophysiology education in chronic low back pain.

Authors:  G Lorimer Moseley; Michael K Nicholas; Paul W Hodges
Journal:  Clin J Pain       Date:  2004 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 3.442

7.  Investigation of elevated fear-avoidance beliefs for patients with low back pain: a secondary analysis involving patients enrolled in physical therapy clinical trials.

Authors:  Steven Z George; Julie M Fritz; John D Childs
Journal:  J Orthop Sports Phys Ther       Date:  2008-01-22       Impact factor: 4.751

8.  'Listen to me, tell me': a qualitative study of partnership in care for people with non-specific chronic low back pain.

Authors:  Susan Carolyn Slade; Elizabeth Molloy; Jennifer Lyn Keating
Journal:  Clin Rehabil       Date:  2009-03       Impact factor: 3.477

9.  Face-to-face and hands-on: assumptions and assessments in the physiotherapy clinic.

Authors:  Eline Thornquist
Journal:  Med Anthropol       Date:  2006 Jan-Mar

10.  Kinesiophobia in patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain: differences between men and women.

Authors:  Harriet Bränström; Martin Fahlström
Journal:  J Rehabil Med       Date:  2008-05       Impact factor: 2.912

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  6 in total

1.  The Development and Testing of a Checklist to Study Behaviour Change Techniques used in a Treatment Programme for Canadian Armed Forces Members with Chronic Non-specific Low Back Pain.

Authors:  Katherine Harman; Marsha MacRae; Michael Vallis
Journal:  Physiother Can       Date:  2014       Impact factor: 1.037

2.  Therapeutic Alliance as Active Inference: The Role of Therapeutic Touch and Biobehavioural Synchrony in Musculoskeletal Care.

Authors:  Zoe McParlin; Francesco Cerritelli; Giacomo Rossettini; Karl J Friston; Jorge E Esteves
Journal:  Front Behav Neurosci       Date:  2022-06-30       Impact factor: 3.617

Review 3.  [Patient education for acute low back pain : Contents of pain education in patients with acute non-specific low back pain - a scoping review].

Authors:  Adrian Roesner; Isabella Zerritsch; Axel Schäfer
Journal:  Schmerz       Date:  2022-02-08       Impact factor: 1.629

4.  Patients' Experiences About Exercise Prescription and Education in the Physiotherapy Management of Nonspecific Low-Back Pain.

Authors:  Omoyemi O Ogwumike; Fatima Bashir-Bello; Bashir Kaka
Journal:  J Patient Exp       Date:  2020-11-02

5.  Experiences of foot and ankle mobilisations combined with home stretches in people with diabetes: a qualitative study embedded in a proof-of-concept randomised controlled trial.

Authors:  Vasileios Lepesis; Jonathan Marsden; Joanne Paton; Alec Rickard; Jos M Latour
Journal:  J Foot Ankle Res       Date:  2022-01-29       Impact factor: 2.303

6.  'Avoidance Preening', Displacement Behavior and Co-Dependency in Professional Team Sport: When Wants Become More Important Than Needs.

Authors:  Blake D McLean; Donnie S Strack; David T Martin
Journal:  Int J Sports Phys Ther       Date:  2022-08-01
  6 in total

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