| Literature DB >> 35708498 |
Luca Falsiroli Maistrello1,2, Laura Zanconato3, Alvisa Palese4, Tommaso Geri5, Andrea Turolla6,7, Silvia Gianola8, Andrea Dell'Isola9, Giacomo Rossettini1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed at exploring the perspectives and experiences of individuals with neck pain by synthesizing all available qualitative studies.Entities:
Keywords: Neck Pain; Qualitative; Rehabilitation
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35708498 PMCID: PMC9384136 DOI: 10.1093/ptj/pzac080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Ther ISSN: 0031-9023
Characteristics of the Included Studies
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| Ahlsen et al | Norway | Chronic NP | To examine how men present themselves as patients with chronic pain and how men’s subjective experience of pain interplays with dominant norms of masculinity | n = 10 M/F = 10/0 Age = 28–47 y | Qualitative interview | Narrative method, combined with a gender-sensitive perspective | Physical damage Working difficulties Troubled private affairs Personal suffering |
| Ahlsen et al | Norway | Chronic NP | To find out more about men’s experiences living with chronic NP and being in treatment | n = 10 M/F = 10/0 Age = 28–47 y | Qualitative interview | Narrative method combined with gender-sensitive perspective | Rebuilding a self Being comforted Being connected |
| Cramer et al | Germany | Chronic nonspecific NP | To investigate the perceived influence of yoga on body awareness and the psychosocial aspects of life for people with chronic NP | n = 18 M/F = 3/15 Age = 19–59 y | Body drawings Semistandardized interviews | Content analysis techniques | Physical dimension Cognitive dimension Emotional dimension Behavioral dimension Social dimension |
| Holmberg et al | Germany | Unspecific chronic NP | To understand how mind–body therapies and exercise therapy may influence the experience of pain among people with chronic NP | n = 20 M/F = 4/16 Age = 29–59 y | Semistructured interviews | Grounded theory | Experiencing NP Intervention experiences in Qigong study arm Intervention experiences in exercise therapy study arm |
| Langenfeld et al | Switzerland | NP | To evaluate the association between objective and subjective cervical range of motion among people with NP and assess awareness of impairments | n = 10 (9 chronic, 1 acute) M/F = 4/6 Age = 23–77 y | Semistructured interviews | Content analysis techniques | Reason for seeing physical therapist ADL restrictions due to NP General description of problem Perception on head movement Subjective impression of movement restriction ADL limitations due to movement restrictions |
| Lauche et al | Germany | Chronic nonspecific NP | To explore body image and its influence on everyday life in people with chronic NP, influence of cupping therapy on people with chronic NP, and to better understand the relationship between chronic pain and body image | n = 6 M/F = 2/4 Age = 52–62 y | Body image drawings and semistructured interviews | Content analysis techniques | Perception of body and pain Handling pain Changes after cupping therapy |
| MacDermid et al | Canada Australia | Chronic or recurrent NP with or without associated arm/shoulder pain | To describe the experience of receiving health care for NP and to determine the meaning of that experience for people living with NP | n = 19 M/F = 1/18 Age = 20–69 y | Semistructured interview | Coding of text (modified Stevick-Colaizzi-Keen) | Complexity in finding effective health care Need for informative, personalized, respectful communication |
| MacDermid et al | Canada | Chronic or recurrent NP with or without associated arm/shoulder pain | To describe quality, distribution, and behavior of NP; to describe pain experiences of people with nonspecific NP using qualitative descriptive approach | n = 16 M/F = 1/15 Age = 20–69 y | Semistructured interview Electronic descriptive pain tool | Descriptive content analysis | Anatomic distribution of pain Quality and intensity of pain Behavior of pain Mediators of pain Impact on activity |
| Schrer et al | Germany | NP | To investigate perspectives and expectations of people presenting with NP in clinical practice | n = 20 M/F = 6/14 Age = 20–78 y | Semistructured telephone interviews | Grounded theory using thematic framework approach | Communication of individual and clinician about reason for encounter People’s competencies Clinician–patient situation from patients’ perspective Experiences with therapeutic options |
ADL = activities of daily living; CNP = chronic neck pain; F = female; GPE = global perceived effect; M = male; NP = neck pain; RTW = return to work.
Figure 1Study selection flow diagram. (see Suppl. Tab. 2 for details and rationale for the excluded studies).
Quality Appraisal of the Included Studies Using the CASP
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| Item 1. Was there a clear statement of the aims of the research? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Item 2. Is a qualitative methodology appropriate? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Item 3. Was the research design appropriate to address the aims of the research? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Item 4. Was the recruitment strategy appropriate to the aims of the research? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | CT | Y | Y | Y |
| Item 5. Were the data collected in a way that addressed the research issue? | CT | CT | CT | Y | CT | CT | CT | Y | Y |
| Item 6. Has the relationship between researcher and participants been adequately considered? | Y | Y | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N |
| Item 7. Have ethical issues been taken into consideration? | CT | N | Y | CT | CT | Y | Y | N | CT |
| Item 8. Was the data analysis sufficiently rigorous? | CT | CT | Y | Y | CT | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Item 9. Is there a clear statement of findings? | CT | CT | Y | Y | CT | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Item 10. How valuable is the research? | Val | Val | Val | Val | Val | Val | Val | Val | Val |
Data evaluated using the Critical Appraisal Skills Programme (CASP). CT = cannot tell; N = no; Val = valuable; Y = yes.
Figure 2Themes of participants’ experiences with neck pain. Each sector represents a participant experience theme. The color of the sector indicates the category to which it belongs: physical (red), psychological (blue), or social (dark blue). In addition, the sector arches indicate the number of studies dealing with the theme (eg, in the theme “gender influences,” the 2-sector arches indicate that 2 of the 9 included studies dealt with that theme, for a total of 22%). ADL = activities of daily living; HCPs = health care professionals.
Meta-Summary
| Themes/Dimension | Categories | Authors | Interstudy Frequency Effect Sizes | ||||||||
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| Ahlsen et al | Ahlsen et al | Cramer et al | Holmberg et al | Langenfeld et al | Lauche et al | MacDermid et al | MacDermid et al | Schrer et al | |||
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| Symptoms | √ | – | – | √ | √ | √ | – | √ | √ |
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| Physical dimension | Body perception | √ | – | – | √ | √ | √ | – | – | – |
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| Psychological consequences | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ |
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| Psychological dimension | Coping strategies | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ |
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| Mindset | √ | √ | – | √ | – | √ | √ | √ | – |
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| Gender influence | √ | √ | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
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| Expectations from health care professionals | – | √ | – | – | – | √ | √ | – | √ |
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| Work | √ | √ | – | √ | √ | – | – | – | – |
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| Social dimension | ADL disability | – | – | √ | √ | √ | – | – | √ | – |
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| Physical activity/ sport | – | – | √ | – | √ | – | √ | – | √ |
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| Social relationships | √ | √ | √ | √ | – | – | – | – | √ |
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Interstudy frequency effect size = ([number of studies containing a finding/total number of studies] × 100); intrastudy intensity effect size = ([number of findings in the study/total number of findings] × 100). ADL = activities of daily living.
Figure 3Elements of the neck pain care process and their influence on the participants’ experience.