Barriers and facilitators to self-management in people with back-related leg pain: a qualitative secondary analysis.

IF 2 4区 医学 Q2 REHABILITATION
Anna-Marie L Ziegler, Don Thorpe, Douglas Kennedy, Craig Schulz, Stacie A Salsbury, Gert Bronfort, Roni Evans
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Back related leg pain (BRLP) is a problematic subset of low back pain, leading to greater pain, loss of function and health related care costs. While evidence suggests self-management is effective, patient implementation can be sub-optimal. The purpose of this study is to identify barriers and facilitators to self-management for persons experiencing BRLP within the context of a controlled clinical trial and to map these to theory-informed intervention elements that can be addressed by front-line healthcare providers, informing the design and implementation of future theory-driven self-management interventions for this population.

Methods: This study was a qualitative secondary analysis of a 2-site, pragmatic, parallel group, randomized clinical trial (participants enrolled 2007-10) of spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) and home exercise and advice (HEA) compared to HEA alone for persons with subacute or chronic BRLP. We used deductive and inductive content analysis, to describe self-management facilitators and barriers among trial participants, map these to behavior change elements in the Behavior Change Wheel (BCW) Framework, and identify potentially modifiable, theory-intervention elements which may be addressed with guidance by healthcare providers. Baseline characteristics of participants were descriptively analyzed using SAS (University Edition).

Results: Of 40 participants, the majority identified as white (n = 24, 85%) and of non-Hispanic or Latino ethnicity (n = 38, 95%). Average participant age was 57 years old (range 29-80). Frequent facilitators included ease of exercises, knowing how to manage condition, atmosphere created by staff, therapeutic alliance, effectiveness of exercises or treatment, goal of reducing pain, and intentions of continuing exercises. Frequent barriers included time constraints, pain, and lacking confidence in treatment. Barriers were mapped to all 9 Intervention Functions, most common being modelling and education. Frequently identified Behavior Change Techniques included information, feedback, self-monitoring, graded tasks, restructuring, social support, goal setting, reviewing goals, and action planning.

Conclusion: This study identified barriers and facilitators to engaging in self-management for participants in a pragmatic, randomized clinical trial. A rigorous systematic intervention mapping process utilizing the BCW was used for describing what participants need and how their needs may be met. These findings may support the design of future self-management interventions for persons experiencing BRLP.

与背部相关的腿痛患者自我管理的障碍和促进因素:一项定性的二次分析。
背景:背部相关性腿痛(BRLP)是腰痛的一个问题子集,导致更大的疼痛,功能丧失和健康相关的护理费用。虽然有证据表明自我管理是有效的,但患者的执行可能不是最佳的。本研究的目的是在对照临床试验的背景下,确定经历BRLP的人自我管理的障碍和促进因素,并将这些因素映射到一线医疗保健提供者可以解决的理论知情干预要素,为未来理论驱动的自我管理干预措施的设计和实施提供信息。方法:本研究是一项双中心、实用、平行组、随机临床试验(2007- 2010年入组)的定性二次分析,将脊柱推拿疗法(SMT)和家庭锻炼和建议(HEA)与单独HEA治疗亚急性或慢性BRLP患者进行比较。我们使用演绎和归纳内容分析来描述试验参与者之间的自我管理促进因素和障碍,将这些因素映射到行为改变轮(BCW)框架中的行为改变因素,并确定可能可修改的理论干预因素,这些因素可以通过医疗保健提供者的指导来解决。使用SAS (University Edition)对参与者的基线特征进行描述性分析。结果:在40名参与者中,大多数确定为白人(n = 24, 85%)和非西班牙裔或拉丁裔(n = 38, 95%)。参与者的平均年龄为57岁(29-80岁)。常见的促进因素包括锻炼的容易程度、了解如何管理病情、工作人员创造的氛围、治疗联盟、锻炼或治疗的有效性、减轻疼痛的目标和继续锻炼的意图。常见的障碍包括时间限制、疼痛和对治疗缺乏信心。障碍被映射到所有9个干预功能,最常见的是建模和教育。常见的行为改变技巧包括信息、反馈、自我监控、分级任务、重组、社会支持、目标设定、回顾目标和行动计划。结论:本研究在一项实用的随机临床试验中确定了参与者参与自我管理的障碍和促进因素。利用BCW,采用了严格的系统干预绘图过程来描述参与者的需求以及如何满足他们的需求。这些发现可能会支持未来BRLP患者自我管理干预的设计。
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来源期刊
Chiropractic & Manual Therapies
Chiropractic & Manual Therapies Medicine-Complementary and Alternative Medicine
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
15.80%
发文量
48
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍: Chiropractic & Manual Therapies publishes manuscripts on all aspects of evidence-based information that is clinically relevant to chiropractors, manual therapists and related health care professionals. Chiropractic & Manual Therapies is an open access journal that aims to provide chiropractors, manual therapists and related health professionals with clinically relevant, evidence-based information. Chiropractic and other manual therapies share a relatively broad diagnostic practice and treatment scope, emphasizing the structure and function of the body''s musculoskeletal framework (especially the spine). The practices of chiropractic and manual therapies are closely associated with treatments including manipulation, which is a key intervention. The range of services provided can also include massage, mobilisation, physical therapies, dry needling, lifestyle and dietary counselling, plus a variety of other associated therapeutic and rehabilitation approaches. Chiropractic & Manual Therapies continues to serve as a critical resource in this field, and as an open access publication, is more readily available to practitioners, researchers and clinicians worldwide.
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