| Literature DB >> 30045749 |
Allan Riis1, Jan Hartvigsen2,3, Michael Skovdal Rathleff4, Tamana Afzali4, Martin Bach Jensen4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Low back pain (LBP) is the most common musculoskeletal disorder and a leading cause of disability worldwide. It impacts daily life and work capacity and is the most common reason for consulting a general practitioner (GP). According to international guidelines, information, reassurance, and advice are key components in the management of people with LBP; however, the consultation time available in general practice for each patient is often limited. Therefore, new methods to support the delivery of information and advice are needed and online technologies provide new opportunities to extend the consultation beyond the GP's office. However, it is not known whether GPs and people consulting their GP because of LBP will accept online technologies as part of the consultation. By involving patients in the development of online information, we may produce more user-friendly content and design, and improve patient acceptance and usage, optimising satisfaction and clinical outcomes. The purpose is to study satisfaction in people consulting their GP with LBP depending on whether they are randomised to receive supporting information through a new participant-driven web application or a standard reference website containing guideline-based information on LBP. It is hypothesised that patients offered information in a new web application will be more satisfied with the online information after 12 weeks compared to patients allocated to a standard website.Entities:
Keywords: Advice; General practice; Health information technology; Low back pain; Participatory design; Patient education; Patient satisfaction
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30045749 PMCID: PMC6060464 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-018-2795-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Timeline of the study. NOTE: Data from questionnaires integrated in the web application. Patients are asked to fill in questions following login at the given time point and before accessing the information on the homepage. In addition, number of entries at homepages will be collected
Fig. 2Flowchart
Fig. 3Participatory design of a new web application
Characteristics of the two interventions
| ARM 1: The intervention group | ARM 2: The control group | |
|---|---|---|
| The new online material | The Patient Handbook (standard website) | |
| Participants | Adult patients consulting Danish general practice with low back pain | |
| Timing of intervention | Patients will be recruited consecutively. A patient will commence after a consultation at the GP and after providing informed consent online | |
| Intervention delivery mode | Interventions can be delivered on smartphones, tablets, or PCs | |
| Duration of intervention | Patients will receive reminders to access their interventions during the 12-week period, which corresponds to the total follow-up period | |
| Intervention provider | The new online information is developed by patients, GPs, and the research group | The Patient Handbook is developed by Sundhed.dk. Containing articles written by medical doctors and allied healthcare professionals |
| Intervention provider training | The provider/development group consists of an interdisciplinary team of researchers, with input from users (patients and GPs) | The provider group consists of a variety of healthcare professionals. Medical doctors are responsible for the content |
| Site of intervention delivery | The interventions will be delivered at patients’ homes, or at other places where patients choose to access the material | |
| Intervention process | Patients will be reminded to access the intervention after 1, 2, 4, 8, and 12 weeks. The interventions can be accessed as frequently as the patients prefer. Patients log on with username and password. Following login, patients will be led to a questionnaire containing two questions. At baseline and after 12 weeks the questionnaires are longer | |
| Intervention content | Guideline concordant information and advice for LBP produced by healthcare professionals an patients | Guideline concordant information and advice for LBP produced by healthcare professionals |
| Intervention materials | The interventions are delivered online. Some patients might choose to print exercise programmes or other materials on paper | |
| Fidelity of treatment | Fidelity will be measured by the number occasions entering the information (both groups) and number of clicks and duration spent on their online information material (intervention group) | |
GP general practitioner, LBP low back pain