| Literature DB >> 26399575 |
Adam W A Geraghty1, Rosie Stanford1, Paul Little1, Lisa Roberts2, Nadine E Foster3, Jonathan C Hill3, Elaine Hay3, Beth Stuart1, David Turner4, Lucy Yardley5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Low back pain (LBP) is a prevalent and costly condition. The majority of patients experiencing LBP are managed in primary care, where first-line care recommendations consist of advice to self-manage and remain active. Internet interventions present a potential means of providing patients with tailored self-management advice and evidence-based support for increasing physical activity. METHODS/ANALYSIS: This protocol describes a single-blind, randomised controlled feasibility trial of an internet intervention developed to support the self-management of LBP in primary care. Patients are being randomised to 1 of 3 groups receiving either usual primary care, usual primary care with the addition of an internet intervention or an internet intervention with physiotherapist telephone support. Patients are followed up at 3 months. Primary outcomes are the feasibility of (1) the trial design/methods, (2) the delivery of the internet intervention and (3) the provision of telephone support by physiotherapists. Secondary outcomes will include exploratory analysis of estimates and variation in clinical outcomes of pain and disability, in order to inform a future main trial. ETHICS/DISSEMINATION: This feasibility trial has undergone ethical scrutiny and been approved by the National Health Service (NHS) Research Ethics Committee, REC Reference 13/SC/0202. The feasibility findings will be disseminated to the research community through presentations at conferences and publication in peer review journals. Broader dissemination will come following a definitive trial. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN 31034004. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.Entities:
Keywords: PRIMARY CARE; REHABILITATION MEDICINE
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26399575 PMCID: PMC4593135 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009524
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Screening questions relating to serious spinal pathology or systemic illness
| High-level musculoskeletal safety questions | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| I now need to ask you some very important questions | |||
| 1 | Since this problem in your back started have you had a sudden, severe, worsening pain in the middle of your abdomen and upper back? | Yes | No |
| 2 | Do you have a new or recent problem in being able to pass urine? | Yes | No |
| 3 | Do you have a new or recent loss of control of your bladder and/or your bowels? | Yes | No |
| 3a | Has your bladder been working properly? Can you tell when it is full? Have you felt that you want to ‘go’ all the time? | Yes | No |
| 4 | Do you have numbness or altered feeling or pins/needles around your back passage or genitals, for example, wiping after being at the toilet? | Yes | No |
| 5 | Since this problem in your back started have you had any heat, swelling or tenderness in your calf? | Yes | No |
| 6 | Since this problem in your back started have you been unable to put any weight at all through your legs? | Yes | No |
| 7 | Do you have constant pain that worsens at night? | Yes | No |
| 8 | Do you have a history of cancer? | Yes | No |
| 9 | Since this problem in your back started have you had any widespread or worsening weakness in your legs? | Yes | No |
| 10 | Did this episode of pain start following a fall, or get much worse and stay bad following a fall? | Yes | No |
| 11 | Do you have any chills or fevers or feel like you are running a temperature? (without other explanation) | Yes | No |
| 12 | Do you have trouble with your balance while walking? | Yes | No |
| 12a |
If ‘Yes’ above, has this changed during the current episode? | Yes | No |
Figure 1Diagram showing the flow of patients through the trial (GP, general practitioner; LBP, low back pain).
Summary table of optional SupportBack module content
| Session number | Content |
|---|---|
| Session 1 |
How SupportBack works How SupportBack differs from other back pain websites Why activity is helpful for back pain, including:
Reassurance Information about positive health consequences Commonly asked questions and responses regarding being more active while experiencing back pain Setting of activity goals: walking or back-specific exercises tailored to current functioning level
Access to rationales, videos and benefits of activities Free to chose and amend activities Set goal level within tailored suggestions |
| Session 2 onwards |
Goal review Feedback based on goal achievement and function level Opportunity to select new goals or keep the same Encouraged to select one module from the below menu
A new module is available to select each session Patients can access their goals and selected module between sessions |
| Sleep |
Stretching before bed Sleeping positions Sleep checklist to improve sleep hygiene |
| Relieving pain |
Pain medication Hot and cold therapy Everyday advice |
| Flare ups |
‘First aid’ exercises Taking pain killers Better posture Alternative ways of easing pain |
| Work |
Getting support from your employer Taking breaks Exercises to try at work Choosing a good chair Making your desk back friendly Using a laptop |
| Mood |
Overview of mood and its connection to pain Cognitive behaviour therapy and mindfulness techniques for improving mood including:
Self-kindness Increasing pleasant activities Mindful walking 3 min breathing space |
| Daily living |
Sitting, standing and bending Lifting and carrying Shopping Doing housework In the bedroom In the bathroom In the kitchen Gardening |
Variables, measures and their characteristics
| Variable | Measure | Items | Details | Reliability where available | Administration point, trial arms |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pain duration | Pain duration | 1 | This single item asks ‘how long it was since you had a whole month without pain’. Response options range from ‘less than 3 months’ to ‘over 10 years’ | Baseline | |
| Back-specific physical disability | RMDQ | 24 | Patients select from a list of items that may describe their experience on the day of scale completion (eg, ‘I sleep less well on my back’). The scale is dichotomous, patients select whether the symptom is present or not | Internal consistency: 0.77–0.93 | Baseline, follow-up |
| Pain intensity | Pain index created by three numerical rating scales | 3 | Patients rate their current pain, average and least pain over the past 2 weeks on three 11-point rating scales | Test-retest reliability: 0.67–0.96 | Baseline, follow-up |
| Days in pain | Number of troublesome days in pain over the last month | 1 | Based on a measure used by Little | Baseline, follow-up | |
| Risk of persistent disability | SBST | 9 | Patents indicate whether they disagree or agree with items covering modifiable prognostic indicators including bothersomeness, disability and mood. Patients are asked to respond thinking about their past 2 weeks | Internal consistency: | Baseline, follow-up |
| Fear of movement | TSK | 17 | Patients rate agreement with items including ‘I'm afraid I will injure myself if I exercise’. Items are scored from 1 to 4, ranging from strongly disagree to strongly agree | Internal consistency range: 0.70–0.79 | Baseline, follow-up |
| Negative orientation toward pain | PCS | 13 | Patients indicate their agreement with items following the stem ‘When I'm in pain…’ Items include ‘I feel like I can't go on’ and are scored on a scale of five-point scale ranging from ‘not at all’ to ‘all of the time’ | Internal consistency: 0.81 | Baseline, follow-up |
| Physical activity | Short form IPAQ | 7 | Patients provide time spent walking, undertaking vigorous and moderate activity, as well as time spent sedentary over the past 7 days | Test-retest reliability range: 0.65–0.88 | Baseline, follow-up |
| Enablement coping/satisfaction | Modified PEI | 6 | Patients are asked to consider the healthcare they have received in the past 3 months and rate items including ‘I am able to cope better with my back problem’ and ‘I am able to understand my back problem better’. Items are scored on a seven-point scale from strongly agree to strongly disagree | Internal consistency: 0.92 | Baseline, follow-up |
| Quality of life | EuroQol EQ-5D | 6 | The EQ-5D consists of two parts. Part 1 consists items on five domains, for example, mobility, self-care. Part 2 features a VAS that records patient's ratings of overall health | Baseline, follow-up | |
| LBP-related health care resource use | Measured with a brief questionnaire developed for this trial | 10 | LBP resource use measured will include medication use, number of GP visits, other NHS care and private LBP related-therapy costs | Follow-up | |
| Time off work | Measured with a single item developed for this trial | 1 | Patients are asked how much time they have had off work in the past 3 months | Follow-up | |
| Beliefs about effectiveness and credibility of the interventions | Modified CEQ | 6 | Patients rate the extent they think/ feel the intervention is likely to improve their back pain-related functioning, and credibility. Items range from 1 not at all to 9 very much. Two items measuring how patients think and feel about likely improvement are measured as a percentage. | Internal consistency range: 0.82–0.84 | Following session 1 |
| Exercise self-efficacy | Modified Self-Efficacy for Exercise scale | 8 | Patients rate how confident they are on a scale between 0 and 10 that they could complete activities suggested by the internet intervention in the face of obstacles such as ‘if they felt pain’, ‘if they were bored’ and ‘if they were depressed’ | Internal consistency: 0.92 | Following session 1 |
| Reasons for non-adherence | PETS | 18 | The scale is designed specifically to measure reasons for patient non-adherence to home-based rehabilitation. Patents rate their agreement with items on a five-point scale across domains including problems with symptoms, uncertainty, doubts, practicalities and lack of support | Internal consistency for the PETS subscales range: 0.84–0.96 | Follow-up |
| Adherence to specific activities for LBP | Items developed specifically for this study | 4 | Patients are asked about the number of weeks if any they may have walked and/or engaged gentle back exercises. They are also asked estimate of how many days a week they went for walks and/or did gentle back exercises. Patients are also asked if they stopped activities because they no longer are experiencing pain | Follow-up |
CEQ, Credibility and Expectancy Questionnaire; GP, general practitioner; IPAQ, International Physical Activity Questionnaire; LBP, low back pain; NHS, National Health Service; PCS, Pain Catastrophising Scale; PEI, Patient Enablement Instrument; PETS, Problematic Experiences of Therapy Scale; RMDQ; Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire; SBST, STarT Back Screening Tool; TSK, The Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia; VAS, Visual Analogue Scale.