| Literature DB >> 33832463 |
Amanda Hall1, Danielle Coombs2, Helen Richmond1, Krystal Bursey3, Brad Furlong1, Rebecca Lawrence1, Steven J Kamper4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Low back pain (LBP) is one of the most common reasons for seeking health care and is costly to the health care system. Recent evidence has shown that LBP care provided by many providers is divergent from guidelines and one reason may be patient's beliefs and expectations about treatment. Thus, examining the nature of patient beliefs and expectations regarding low back pain treatment will help coordinate efforts to improve consistency and quality of care.Entities:
Keywords: Back beliefs; Cross-sectional; General public; Low back pain
Year: 2021 PMID: 33832463 PMCID: PMC8028215 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-021-10664-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Demographics, LBP characteristics and outcomes of survey participants (total n = 428)
| Item | Response | # missing |
|---|---|---|
| Age (Mean, SD) | 55.35 (14.67) | 0 |
| Female (N, %) | 281 (65.6.0) | 2 |
| History of low back pain (N, %) | 386 (90.2) | 0 |
| Low back pain in the last 12 months (N, %) a | 339 (87.8) | 4 |
| Low back pain in the last week (N, %) a | 252 (74.3) | 4 |
| Last episode of low back pain severity [0–10] (mean, SD) a | 5.8 (2.3) | 5 |
| Care seeking for low back pain (N, %) a | 200 (51.8) | 3 |
athese questions were only answered by the sample of people who reported a history of back pain (n = 386), the percentage is calculated from completed responses only
The Back Beliefs Questionnaire (9 items for scoring)
| BBQ item | # of respondents | Disagree (1 &2) | Neutral (3) | Agree (4&5) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. There is no real treatment for back trouble (item1) | 420 | 245 (58.3) | 110 (26.2) | 65 (15.5) |
| 2. Back trouble will eventually stop you from working (item 2) | 417 | 172 (41.2) | 103 (24.7) | 142 (34.1) |
| 3. Back trouble means periods of pain for the rest of one’s life (item 3) | 416 | 121 (29.1) | 103 (24.8) | 192 (46.2) |
| 4. Back trouble makes everything in life worse (item 6) | 417 | 104 (24.9) | 129 (30.9) | 184 (44.1) |
| 5. Back trouble means you end up in a wheelchair (item 8) | 421 | 253 (60.1) | 101 (24.0) | 67 (15.9) |
| 6. Back trouble means long periods of time off work (item 10) | 414 | 211 (51.0) | 119 (28.7) | 84 (20.3) |
| 7. Once you have had back trouble there is always a weakness (item 12) | 418 | 122 (29.2) | 90 (21.5) | 206 (49.3) |
| 8. Back trouble must be rested (item 13) | 415 | 89 (21.4) | 154 (37.1) | 172 (41.4) |
| 9. Later in life back trouble gets progressively worse (item 14) | 417 | 94 (22.5) | 123 (29.5) | 200 (48.0) |
Additional beliefs about activity, rest, and the use of imaging and pain killers
| Belief statements | # of respondents | Disagree (1 & 2) | Neutral (3) | Agree (4 &5) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. X-rays or scans are necessary to get the best medical care for low back pain | 419 | 86 (20.5) | 106 (25.3) | 227 (54.2) |
| 2. Everyone with low back pain should have spine imaging (e.g X-ray, CT, MRI) | 416 | 108 (26.0) | 99 (23.8) | 209 (50.2) |
| 3. If you have back pain, you should rest until it gets better | 419 | 159 (37.9) | 160 (38.2) | 100 (23.9) |
| 4. If you have back pain, you should try to stay active | 417 | 46 (11.0) bad | 141 (33.8) | 230 (55.2) |
| 5. Simple painkillers are usually enough to control most back pain | 418 | 200 (47.8) bad | 118 (28.2) | 100 (23.9) |
| 6. Most back pain settles quickly, and you can get on with normal activities such as going to work | 422 | 165 (39.1) bad | 144 (34.1) | 113 (26.8) |