| Literature DB >> 33097054 |
Lindsay A Ballengee1, J Kyle Covington2, Steven Z George3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is an increasing need for physical therapists to address psychosocial aspects of musculoskeletal pain. Psychologically informed practice is one way to deliver this type of care through the integration of biopsychosocial interventions into patient management. An important component of psychologically informed practice is patient centered communication. However, there is little research on how to effectively implement patient centered communication into pre-licensure training for physical therapists.Entities:
Keywords: Education; Implementation; Pain; Psychologically informed physical therapy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33097054 PMCID: PMC7583179 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-020-02272-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Fig. 1Components of PIPT Educational Intervention
Specific Case Studies and Student Goals for Behaviors During Experiential Learning Sessions
| Session | One | Two | Three | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Behavior | Interpersonal effectiveness | Autonomy | Collaboration/Self-efficacy | Active listening | Positive expectations |
| Patient | 35-year-old, pregnant woman who is currently smoking with low back pain. | 65-year-old with 10-year history of low back pain. Exhibits catastrophizing and fear of movement. | 40-year-old with 2-year history of shoulder pain after a fall at work. Exhibits fear of movement with any overhead motions. | 50-year-old with multiple painful body parts and a diagnosis of fibromyalgia. Has had a bad experience with PT. | 65-year-old with bilateral knee pain. Patient has been told he needs double knee replacements but cannot have surgery until he loses 20lbs. |
| Goal | Subjective interview ending with 2–3 value-based goals for treatment plan. | Use shared-decision making to formulate home exercise plan. | Work with patient to come to a decision about gentle movement using shared decision-making and values-based goal setting. | Interview patient and provide 2 simple reflections and 1 complex reflection. | Interview patient and provide 1–2 recommendations on where to start with exercises/weight loss plan by using tenets of positive expectations. |
Descriptive Data for Sample
| Variable | Total Sample ( |
|---|---|
| Year in school | 63% 2nd year DPT students |
| Sex (% female) | 90% |
| Learning objectives met (% agree) | 90% |
| Assessment of learning material (% agree) | 96% |
| Applicability of the material (% agree) | 94% |
| Engagement in the sessions (% agree) | 100% |
Pre-Intervention and Post-Intervention PABS-PT and PIPT Adherent Behaviors Mean Domain Changes
| Domain | Pre-Intervention | Post-Intervention | t | Effect Size | p |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biomedical | 33.24 (sd = 4.81) | 28.76 (sd = 7.57) | 4.01 | 0.88 | < 0.001 |
| Biopsychosocial | 55.19 (sd = 4.19) | 56.14 (sd = 3.14) | −1.23 | 0.27 | 0.233 |
| PIPT behaviors | 2.02 (sd = 0.54) | 3.14 (sd = 0.39) | −10.80 | 2.30 | < 0.001 |
Sample of Questions, Themes, and Illustrative Quotes from Student Reactions Questionnaire with the Richest Free Text Responses
| Q1: Benefits of Intervention | Q2: Perceived Implementation Challenges | Q3: Areas for Improvement of Intervention | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Student Quotation Supporting Theme | “I feel more equipped to help patients feel empowered with their treatment and want to view it as a PT-patient partnership rather than expert-patient relationship.” “I feel that I will now have a greater ability to communicate with all different types of patients and their emotions/coping with their injuries and pain.” | “I don’t want to force the patient to talk about something if they don’t want to, so I struggle with wanting to dig deeper but only on the patient’s terms.” “The amount of time we normally spend with patients could limit therapists’ ability to use this type of interviewing/communication strategy with patients.” | “I wish we had more sessions!...I normally dread role playing exercises, but was pleasantly surprised by how much I enjoyed them and engaged in them. I wish we had more sessions to practice.” “Possibly providing us with more structured feedback about our mock patient interview and what, if anything, we improved upon after PIPT.” |
| Number of responses/word count | 18/676 words | 18/524 words | 16/473 words |
Fig. 2Structure for Implementation of PIPT Training into Educational Curriculum