| Literature DB >> 34908873 |
Lindsay A Ballengee1,2,3, Leah L Zullig3,4, Steven Z George1,5.
Abstract
Low back pain continues to be a leading cause of disability and cost throughout the world. Evidence-based guidelines recommend use of non-pharmacological interventions to address decreases in physical function due to low back pain. Psychologically informed physical therapy (PIPT) is one way to effectively and efficiently address the need for non-pharmacological approaches. However, adoption of psychologically informed practice (PiP) by physical therapists has shown mixed results due to implementation challenges. In this perspective, we discuss the current state of PIPT training and implementation. We also propose a conceptual roadmap for future implementation needs related to increasing delivery of PIPT-informed approaches.Entities:
Keywords: implementation science; non-pharmacological; pain; physical therapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34908873 PMCID: PMC8665872 DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S311973
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pain Res ISSN: 1178-7090 Impact factor: 3.133
Key Components Comprising Psychologically Informed Practice (PIPT)
| Over-Arching Components of PIPT | ||
|---|---|---|
| Rationale/Goals/Objectives | Concrete Example | |
| Patient Centered Communication | Motivational Interviewing | |
| Pain Modulation | TENS | |
| Reinforcement = providing encouragement when patient reports using hot packs at home to help relieve pain. | ||
| Pain Coping Skills | Deep Breathing | |
| Reinforcement = answering questions and practicing deep breathing exercises in clinic | ||
| Activity and Exercise Recommendations | Graded Exposure | |
| Reinforcement = praising patient for reaching activity goal in clinic, despite pain levels not improving yet | ||
PIPT Training Examples for Licensed Physical Therapists
| Research Physical Therapists in TARGET Trial | Research Physical Therapists in Knee OA RCT | Outpatient MSK Physical Therapists | Primary Care Clinicians and Outpatient Physical Therapists in MATCH Trial | Outpatient Physical Therapists in STarT Back Trial |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| One day course, primarily didactic | Ten, 45-min modules delivered over 4 days with ongoing mentoring/feedback | Two-day course, mixture of didactic and experiential, training manual, monthly supervision/feedback | Six didactic sessions for primary care, five days of intensive training for PTs with ongoing mentoring and supervision | One-to-six-day training depending on intervention group |
| •Pain Attitudes and Beliefs Scale for Physical Therapists | •Treatment fidelity checklist to measure therapist adherence to protocol/manual and session performance | •Treatment fidelity checklist to measure therapist adherence to protocol/manual and session performance | •Electronic healthcare record monitoring | •Health record auditing |
| 1. Summarize relationships between pain neuroscience, pain models, and the development and maintenance of chronic low back pain | 1. Establishes/maintains rapport | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported. |
Figure 1Dissemination and implementation framework.
Figure 2PIPT implementation roadmap.
Hybrid Effectiveness-Implementation Study Designs with Corresponding PIPT Research Questions, Clinical Outcomes, and Implementation Outcomes43
| Type 1 | Type 2 | Type 3 |
|---|---|---|
| Focus: Effectiveness of intervention with “exploration” of intervention implementation | Focus: Dual focus on effectiveness and implementation outcomes | Focus: Implementation outcomes |
| Primary aim: Determine effectiveness of PiP approach for patients with low back pain. | Co-primary aim: Determine effectiveness of PiP approach while also determining feasibility and utility of a particular implementation intervention or strategy. | Primary aim: Determine utility of a specific implementation intervention or strategy (eg one-day, in-person PiP training program vs online PiP training module). |