| Literature DB >> 30497440 |
Per Kjaer1,2, Alice Kongsted3,4, Inge Ris3, Allan Abbott5, Charlotte Diana Nørregaard Rasmussen6, Ewa M Roos7, Søren T Skou7,8, Tonny Elmose Andersen9, Jan Hartvigsen3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical guidelines recommend that people with back pain be given information and education about their back pain, advice to remain active and at work, and exercises to improve mobility and physical activity. Guidelines, however, rarely describe how this is best delivered. The aim of this paper is to present the development, theories, and underlying evidence for 'GLA:D Back' - a group education and exercise program that translates guideline recommendations into a clinician-delivered program for the promotion of self-management in people with persistent/recurrent back pain.Entities:
Keywords: Back pain; Exercise therapy; Intervention development; Patient education; Primary health care
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30497440 PMCID: PMC6267880 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-018-2334-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
An overview of identified change objectives from the literature and group discussions for people with back pain, including potential interventions and the relevant components
| Who | What: Change objects | How: Interventions | Intervention components |
|---|---|---|---|
| People with back pain | Quality of life | Education, exercises and activity engagement | Sum of all components |
| Self-efficacy, and sense of control | Education and exercise | Information about back pain (triggers, prognosis, treatment guidelines, imaging, structures of the back) | |
| Self-management | Education and exercise | Encouragement to stay physically active and continue with normal/everyday activities | |
| Pain experience and control over pain | Education and exercise | Understanding and accepting pain | |
| Negative thoughts and beliefs | Education and exercise | Education about changing thought patterns to avoid catastrophising and negative thoughts | |
| Structural beliefs | Education and exercise | Encouragement to stay physically active and continue with normal/everyday activities | |
| Expectations about exact diagnosis and imaging | Education | Describing back pain as a recurrent condition | |
| Better interaction with health professionals | Education | Recognition that back pain interacts with many aspects of life | |
| Free and natural movements | Education and exercise | Individually adapted level of exercises including strength and flexibility | |
| Fear of movement | Education and exercise | ||
| Muscle strength | Exercise | ||
| Physical fitness | Education, exercise and physical activity | Explanations of beneficial effects of physical activity and exercise |
An overview of identified change objectives from the literature and group discussions for health care providers and the society including potential interventions and their relevant components
| Who | What: Change objects | How: Interventions |
|---|---|---|
| Health care provider | Change of biomedical beliefs towards bio-psycho-social and cognitive understanding | Clinician course (see protocol paper) |
| Knowledge about management of people with back pain | Clinician course (see protocol paper) | |
| Ways to implement a non-structural approach | Patient education materials, examples of exercise program guidance and progression | |
| Society | Number of consultations | Sum of all components of the GLA:D Back program and the clinician course (see protocol paper) |
| Amount of sick leave | ||
| Medication | ||
| Use of imaging | ||
| Use of surgery | ||
| Use of injections |
Fig. 1Program model. Overview of the GLA:D Back intervention, the proposed patient achievements and outcomes through the GLA:D Back program and their theoretical links
Overview of the key messages, educational themes and performance objectives for the person with low back pain and the exercise components of the GLA:D Back intervention. The Table is constructed from the literature and consensus discussions about the content of the intervention
| Key Messages | Educational theme/activity | Self-Management |
|---|---|---|
| Performance objectives | ||
| A healthy back requires a balance between demands and capacity | Behavioural pain control | The person with back pain achieves an increased |
| Pain = Alarm | Pain mechanisms Exercise | The person with back pain achieves |
| Bad posture and deformations of the spine are common | Imaging | The person with back pain has |
| Action comes before improvement | Treatment | The person with back pain achieves |
| The back is made for movement | Exercises | The person with back pain obtains physical skills with |
An overview of the targets for the interventions, the corresponding intervention components and outcome measuresa
| Target | Intervention component directed at the target | Measured construct (measurement tool) |
|---|---|---|
| Knowledge and beliefs | Patient education | Illness Perceptions (B-IPQ) [ |
| Skills and performance | Exercise sessions | Perceived ability to perform exercises (single item) |
| Self-efficacy | Patient education | Self-efficacy (Arthritis Self-Efficacy Scale) [ |
| Self-management success | Patient education | Disability (Oswestry Disability Index) [ |
| System Outcomes | Patient education | Visits to health care providers, imaging, pain medication and sick leave (Danish national registries) [ |
aDetails of the effect, evaluation and outcome measures are reported elsewhere (Kongsted A, Ris I, Kjaer P, Vach W, Morso L, Hartvigsen J: GLA:D® Back: Implementation of group-based patient education integrated with exercises to support self-management of back pain. Protocol for a hybrid effectiveness-implementation study, submitted)
Key activities for supporting self-efficacy according to social cognitive theory [52]
| Determinants of self-efficacy | Presence in GLA:D Back | Activity in GLA:D |
|---|---|---|
| Performance accomplishments | Positive experiences with movement | Focus point of exercise delivery |
| Vicarious experience | Observing and interacting with fellow patients | Group-based intervention |
| Social persuasion | Verbal encouragement during exercises | Motivating patients to explore movement rather than correcting performance |
| Physiological feedback | Providing non-threatening explanations for pain provocation during movement | Integrating education on pain mechanisms with exercise supervision (Additional file |
Fig. 2The balance model. Illustration from the patient education explaining that pain is a result of your demands (physical, emotional and social) exceeding your capacity (physical, emotional, and cognitive)
Fig. 3Key messages in GLA:D® Back. An overview of key messages from the GLA:D Back pain education material. (GLA:D® is a registered Trademark of the University of Southern Denmark: The name can only be used for an intervention if all criteria described by the University of Southern Denmark are met).
Fig. 4Exercise example. An example of exercises for the lateral buttocks at four different levels. The individual depicted in the images provided her written informed consent for the publication of this identifiable image. (GLA:D® is a registered Trademark of the University of Southern Denmark: The name can only be used for an intervention if all criteria described by the University of Southern Denmark are met).