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  1. AU="Hill, Jonathan C"
  2. AU="Chankasingh, Kyle"
  3. AU="Narayanasami, Uma"
  4. AU="Chen, Ruichao"
  5. AU=Li Xuefeng AU=Li Xuefeng
  6. AU="Stef J.F. Letteboer"
  7. AU="Gewurz, H"
  8. AU="Linares, Mauricio"
  9. AU="Gnesi, Marco"
  10. AU="Park, Jinny"
  11. AU="Hill, Benjamin D"
  12. AU=Huang Chunfa
  13. AU="Skonieczny, Paul"
  14. AU="LIVINGSTON, M S"
  15. AU="Lidia Gonzalez-Quereda"
  16. AU="Korkmaz, Asli"
  17. AU="Patel, Mrinal"
  18. AU="Louis Chauvel"
  19. AU="Jampen, Laurent"
  20. AU="Tan, Jiacheng"
  21. AU="Weiss, Jonathan D"

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  1. Artikel ; Online: Are we giving stratified care a fair trial?

    Foster, Nadine E / Hill, Jonathan C / Knoop, Jesper

    Journal of physiotherapy

    2023  Band 69, Heft 2, Seite(n) 65–67

    Mesh-Begriff(e) Humans ; Patient Care/methods
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2023-03-11
    Erscheinungsland Netherlands
    Dokumenttyp Editorial ; Comment
    ZDB-ID 2543915-7
    ISSN 1836-9561 ; 1836-9553 ; 0004-9514
    ISSN (online) 1836-9561
    ISSN 1836-9553 ; 0004-9514
    DOI 10.1016/j.jphys.2023.02.014
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Artikel ; Online: Benchmarking quality of care using patient reported outcome measure data for patients presenting with musculoskeletal conditions in primary care GP practices.

    Burgess, Roanna / Lewis, Martyn / Hill, Jonathan C

    Musculoskeletal care

    2023  Band 21, Heft 3, Seite(n) 713–722

    Abstract: Background: Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) evaluate health status from a patient perspective. They can be used to support care at a patient level but also collectively to review quality of care across care providers. Vast amounts of patients ... ...

    Abstract Background: Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) evaluate health status from a patient perspective. They can be used to support care at a patient level but also collectively to review quality of care across care providers. Vast amounts of patients with musculoskeletal (MSK) conditions present to General Practice (GP) primary care practitioners each year. Variation in patient outcomes in this setting however has not been reported.
    Objective: To identify variation in patient outcomes measured using the musculoskeletal health questionnaire (MSK-HQ) PROM for adults presenting to 20 GP practices in the UK with MSK conditions.
    Methods: A secondary analysis of the STarT MSK cluster randomised controlled trial dataset. A standardised case-mix adjustment model, adjusting for condition complexity co-variates, was used to calculate predicted 6-month follow-up MSK-HQ scores, and used to compare adjusted and un-adjusted health gain (n = 868). Patient MSK-HQ change outcomes were aggregated to practice level and boxplots used to display outlier GP practices for un-adjusted and adjusted outcomes.
    Results: Substantial variation in patient outcomes was seen across the 20 practices, even after case-mix adjustment, with mean change in MSK-HQ scores ranging from 6 to 12 points. Boxplots displaying un-adjusted outcomes showed one negative GP practice outlier and two positive outliers. However, the boxplots displaying case-mix adjusted outcomes showed no negative outliers, with two practices remaining as positive outliers, and one practice additionally becoming a positive outlier.
    Conclusion: This study showed a two-fold GP practice variation in patient outcomes measured using the MSK-HQ PROM. To our knowledge it is the first study to demonstrate that (a) a standardised case-mix adjustment method can be used to fairly compare patient health outcome variation in GP care, and (b) that case-mix adjustment changes benchmarking findings with regards to provider performance and outlier identification. This has important implications for identifying best practice exemplars and thereby helping to improve the quality of MSK primary care in the future.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Adult ; Humans ; Benchmarking ; Musculoskeletal Diseases/therapy ; General Practice ; Patient Reported Outcome Measures ; Primary Health Care
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2023-03-02
    Erscheinungsland England
    Dokumenttyp Randomized Controlled Trial ; Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2171452-6
    ISSN 1557-0681 ; 1478-2189
    ISSN (online) 1557-0681
    ISSN 1478-2189
    DOI 10.1002/msc.1744
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Artikel ; Online: Exploring the feasibility and acceptance of an optimised physiotherapy approach for lateral elbow tendinopathy: a qualitative investigation within the OPTimisE trial.

    Bateman, Marcus / Saunders, Benjamin / Cooper, Karin / Littlewood, Chris / Hill, Jonathan C

    BMJ open

    2024  Band 14, Heft 3, Seite(n) e073816

    Abstract: Objectives: To explore the acceptability of an optimised physiotherapy (OPTimisE) intervention for people with lateral elbow tendinopathy (LET) and feasibility of comparing it to usual care in a randomised controlled trial.: Design: Semistructured ... ...

    Abstract Objectives: To explore the acceptability of an optimised physiotherapy (OPTimisE) intervention for people with lateral elbow tendinopathy (LET) and feasibility of comparing it to usual care in a randomised controlled trial.
    Design: Semistructured interviews, analysed using thematic analysis and mapped onto the COM-B model of behaviour change.
    Setting: Conducted as part of the OPTimisE Pilot & Feasibility randomised controlled trial within physiotherapy departments in the United Kingdom National Health Service.
    Participants: 17 patients with LET (purposively sampled to provide representativeness based on age, sex, ethnicity, deprivation index and treatment allocation) and all 8 physiotherapists involved as treating clinicians or site principal investigators.
    Results: Four themes were identified. First, participants reported the OPTimisE intervention as acceptable. Second, differences between the OPTimisE intervention and usual care were identified, including the use of an orthosis, holistic advice/education including modifiable risk factors, forearm stretches, general upper body strengthening and a more prescriptive exercise-dosing regimen. Third, participants provided feedback related to the trial resources, which were viewed positively, but identified language translation as a need. Fourth, feedback related to trial processes identified the need for changes to outcome collection and reduction of administrative burden. From the perspective of adopting the OPTimisE intervention, we found evidence that participants were able to change their behaviour. Considering the findings through the lens of the COM-B model, the intervention is likely to be deliverable in practice and the trial can be delivered at scale with some additional support for physiotherapists.
    Conclusions: Overall, the OPTimisE intervention was found to be different to usual care and acceptable to patients and physiotherapists. The study highlighted the need to refine trial processes and resources prior to a full-scale trial, to reduce administrative burden, increase support for physiotherapists, improve return rate of outcome questionnaires and provide language translation.
    Trial registration number: ISRCTN database 19 July 2021. https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN64444585.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Humans ; Exercise Therapy ; Elbow Tendinopathy ; State Medicine ; Feasibility Studies ; Physical Therapy Modalities ; Tendinopathy/therapy
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2024-03-13
    Erscheinungsland England
    Dokumenttyp Randomized Controlled Trial ; Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2599832-8
    ISSN 2044-6055 ; 2044-6055
    ISSN (online) 2044-6055
    ISSN 2044-6055
    DOI 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-073816
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Artikel ; Online: The Swedish version of the STarT MSK Tool: cross-cultural adaption, test-retest reliability, and aspects of validity.

    Rasmussen-Barr, Eva / Sövelid, Maria / Krantz, Rasmus / Hill, Jonathan C

    BMC musculoskeletal disorders

    2023  Band 24, Heft 1, Seite(n) 644

    Abstract: Background: Musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) are a common reason for seeking primary health care. The STarT Musculoskeletal (MSK) tool is designed to stratify patients suffering from MSDs to risk groups, based on prognostic factors.: Aim: The aim was ...

    Abstract Background: Musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) are a common reason for seeking primary health care. The STarT Musculoskeletal (MSK) tool is designed to stratify patients suffering from MSDs to risk groups, based on prognostic factors.
    Aim: The aim was to translate and cross-culturally adapt the STarT MSK tool in a Swedish primary health care context through testing of reliability and construct validity.
    Methods: We included consecutive patients with MSDs seeking primary care (n = 99). The STarT MSK was translated using international recommendations. Construct validity was investigated by correlation analysis (Spearmans Rho) with the following reference instruments: the Örebro Musculoskeletal Pain Questionnaire (ÖMPQ), the EuroQol 5-dimension (EQ-5D) and the Musculoskeletal Health Questionnaire (MSKHQ). Reliability was tested using test-retest (Intra Class Correlation, ICC
    Results: The STarT MSK was successfully translated into Swedish. The participants were grouped into low risk (n = 28), medium risk (n = 60) and high risk (n = 11). The construct validity showed a moderate to high correlation with the ÖMPQ (r = .61), EQ-5D (r = .59) and MSK-HQ (r = .56). All separate items except item 2 and 9 correlated according to predefined hypotheses. Test-retest demonstrated an excellent reliability for the total score (ICC
    Conclusion: The STarT MSK has been successfully translated and adapted into Swedish and shows acceptable measurement properties regarding test-retest reliability and aspects of validity and seems to be able to discriminate between the proposed risk groups. The tool can therefore be useful in a Swedish primary health care context. A future study needs to determine the tools predictive validity and to investigate if stratification to risk groups leads to a faster recovery and to lower health care costs.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Humans ; Reproducibility of Results ; Sweden ; Cross-Cultural Comparison ; Surveys and Questionnaires ; Musculoskeletal Pain/diagnosis ; Psychometrics
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2023-08-10
    Erscheinungsland England
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2041355-5
    ISSN 1471-2474 ; 1471-2474
    ISSN (online) 1471-2474
    ISSN 1471-2474
    DOI 10.1186/s12891-023-06771-6
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Artikel ; Online: Benchmarking community/primary care musculoskeletal services: A narrative review and recommendation.

    Burgess, Roanna / Lewis, Martyn / Hill, Jonathan C

    Musculoskeletal care

    2022  Band 21, Heft 1, Seite(n) 148–158

    Abstract: Introduction: High quality data on service performance is essential in healthcare to evidence efficacy, efficiency, and value. There remains a paucity of publicly reported data in community and primary care musculoskeletal (MSK) services. There is also ... ...

    Abstract Introduction: High quality data on service performance is essential in healthcare to evidence efficacy, efficiency, and value. There remains a paucity of publicly reported data in community and primary care musculoskeletal (MSK) services. There is also a lack of guidance on which metrics MSK services should be collecting and reporting, and how this data could be used to directly improve patient outcomes, experiences, and value.
    Method: A narrative review of the evidence around benchmarking MSK services was undertaken with a focus on how to develop routine data collection within community/primary care settings, and how to develop benchmarking capabilities for the future, looking towards a national MSK audit. This evidence was triangulated with the findings from recent MSK data studies undertaken by the authors and emerging UK policy and guidance in this area.
    Recommendations: To enable MSK benchmarking services need to collect consistent, standardised outcomes and, therefore, we have developed a recommendation on a minimum MSK 'core outcome set' of Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) and Patient Reported Experience Measures (PREMs) (PROMs: MSK-HQ, NPRS, WPAI; PREMs: National MSK PREM). In addition, we make recommendations on the use of a standardised evidence-based method for case-mix adjustment and outlier identification (using the following baseline demographics and clinical factors; age, sex, ethnicity, pain site, comorbidities, duration of symptoms, previous surgery, previous pain episodes), alongside considerations on how this data should be integrated and reported within NHS systems.
    Conclusions: Capturing high quality MSK data in a standardised, consistent, and sustainable way is a significant challenge. Policy holders, commissioners, managers, and clinicians need to be realistic with expectations, and take time to explore barriers to implementation including, funding, digital infrastructure/intra-operability, data sharing/governance, digital literacy, and local/national leadership. Next steps include developing a national MSK audit programme to provide a benchmarking model to support continuous improvements in care quality for patients living with MSK conditions.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Humans ; Benchmarking ; Delivery of Health Care ; Primary Health Care ; Pain
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2022-08-11
    Erscheinungsland England
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article ; Review
    ZDB-ID 2171452-6
    ISSN 1557-0681 ; 1478-2189
    ISSN (online) 1557-0681
    ISSN 1478-2189
    DOI 10.1002/msc.1676
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  6. Artikel ; Online: Lived experience of people with lateral elbow tendinopathy: a qualitative study from the OPTimisE pilot and feasibility trial.

    Bateman, Marcus / Hill, Jonathan C / Cooper, Karin / Littlewood, Chris / Saunders, Benjamin

    BMJ open

    2023  Band 13, Heft 8, Seite(n) e072070

    Abstract: Objectives: To explore the lived experience of people with lateral elbow tendinopathy (LET) and its impact on everyday life.: Design: Qualitative semi-structured interviews, analysed using thematic analysis.: Setting: Conducted as part of the ... ...

    Abstract Objectives: To explore the lived experience of people with lateral elbow tendinopathy (LET) and its impact on everyday life.
    Design: Qualitative semi-structured interviews, analysed using thematic analysis.
    Setting: Conducted as part of the mixed-methods OPTimisE pilot and feasibility randomised controlled trial of outpatient physiotherapy patients in the UK.
    Participants: 17 participants with LET, purposively sampled from the trial to provide representativeness based on age, sex, ethnicity, deprivation index and treatment allocation.
    Results: Four themes were identified from the participants' responses: (1) cause of onset-typically symptoms were attributed to: sudden changes in activity, repetitive work or compensating for other musculoskeletal conditions; (2) impact on everyday life-which included substantial impacts on quality-of-life, particularly due to pain disturbing sleep and difficulties performing daily tasks (related to work and hobbies) due to pain, although most reported being able to persevere with work; (3) self-help and understanding of the condition-with uncertainty about the appropriateness and potential harm of online advice and confusion from the diagnostic term 'Tennis Elbow' that non-sporting individuals struggled to relate to; (4) healthcare experiences-the treatments received were highly variable and often perceived as ineffectual.
    Conclusions: For the first time, the lived experience of people from a range of backgrounds suffering from LET has been explored. Findings suggest that people frequently related the cause to a specific activity. They reported substantial impacts on daily tasks, sleep, work and hobbies. People also reported hesitancy to trust online information without formal healthcare advice, were confused by the common label of 'Tennis Elbow', and perceived the wide array of healthcare treatment options they had received to offer false hope and be largely ineffective. This study provides stimulus for clinicians to consider the advice and treatment provided, and whether the messages conveyed reflect the favourable natural history of the condition.
    Trial registration number: ISRCTN64444585.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Humans ; Confusion ; Elbow ; Elbow Tendinopathy ; Feasibility Studies ; Musculoskeletal Diseases ; Pain ; Tendinopathy/therapy ; Tennis Elbow
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2023-08-29
    Erscheinungsland England
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article ; Randomized Controlled Trial ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2599832-8
    ISSN 2044-6055 ; 2044-6055
    ISSN (online) 2044-6055
    ISSN 2044-6055
    DOI 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-072070
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  7. Artikel ; Online: Validation of the Keele STarT MSK Tool for Patients With Musculoskeletal Pain in United States-based Outpatient Physical Therapy Settings.

    Beneciuk, Jason M / Michener, Lori A / Sigman, Erica / Harrison, Trent / Buzzanca-Fried, Katherine E / Lu, Xinlin / Shan, Guogen / Hill, Jonathan C

    The journal of pain

    2024  , Seite(n) 104475

    Abstract: The STarT MSK tool was developed to enable risk stratification of patients with common musculoskeletal (MSK) pain conditions and help identify individuals who may require more targeted interventions or closer monitoring in primary care settings, however, ...

    Abstract The STarT MSK tool was developed to enable risk stratification of patients with common musculoskeletal (MSK) pain conditions and help identify individuals who may require more targeted interventions or closer monitoring in primary care settings, however, its validity in U.S.-based outpatient physical therapy settings has not been investigated. The 10-item Keele STarT MSK risk stratification tool was tested for construct (convergent and discriminant) and predictive validity using a multicenter, prospective cohort study design. Participants (n = 141) receiving physical therapy for MSK pain of the back, neck, shoulder, hip, knee, or multisite regions completed intake questionnaires including the Keele STarT MSK tool, Functional Comorbidity Index (FCI), Optimal Screening for Prediction of Referral and Outcome Review-of-Systems and Optimal Screening for Prediction of Referral and Outcome Yellow Flag tools. Pain intensity, pain interference, and health-related quality of life (Medical Outcomes Study 8-item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-8) physical [PCS] and mental [MCS] component summary scores) were measured at 2- and 6-month follow-up. Participants were classified as STarT MSK tool low (44%), medium (39%), and high (17%) risk. Follow-up rates were 70.2% (2 months) and 49.6% (6 months). For convergent validity, fair relationships were observed between the STarT MSK tool and FCI and SF-8 MCS (r = .35-.37) while moderate-to-good relationships (r = .51-.72) were observed for 7 other clinical measures. For discriminant validity, STarT MSK tool risk-dependent relationships were observed for Optimal Screening for Prediction of Referral and Outcome Review-of-Systems, Optimal Screening for Prediction of Referral and Outcome Yellow Flag, pain interference, and SF-8 PCS (low < medium < high; P < .01) and FCI, pain intensity, and SF-8 MCS (low <medium-or-high; P < .01). For predictive validity, intake STarT MSK tool scores explained additional variability in pain intensity (11.2%, 20.0%), pain interference (7.5%, 14.1%), and SF-8 PCS (8.2%, 12.8%) scores at 2 and 6 months, respectively. This study contributes to the existing literature by providing additional evidence of STarT MSK tool cross-sectional construct validity and longitudinal predictive validity. PERSPECTIVE: This study presents STarT MSK risk stratification tool validity findings from a U.S. outpatient physical therapy sample. The STarT MSK tool has the potential to help physical therapists identify individuals presenting with the most common MSK pain conditions who may require more targeted interventions or closer monitoring.<br />
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2024-01-17
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article ; Review
    ZDB-ID 2018789-0
    ISSN 1528-8447 ; 1526-5900
    ISSN (online) 1528-8447
    ISSN 1526-5900
    DOI 10.1016/j.jpain.2024.01.340
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  8. Artikel ; Online: Development of an optimised physiotherapist-led treatment protocol for lateral elbow tendinopathy: a consensus study using an online nominal group technique.

    Bateman, Marcus / Saunders, Benjamin / Littlewood, Chris / Hill, Jonathan C

    BMJ open

    2021  Band 11, Heft 12, Seite(n) e053841

    Abstract: Objectives: There are a wide range of physiotherapy treatment options for people with lateral elbow tendinopathy (LET); however, previous studies have reported inconsistent approaches to treatment and a lack of evidence demonstrating clinical ... ...

    Abstract Objectives: There are a wide range of physiotherapy treatment options for people with lateral elbow tendinopathy (LET); however, previous studies have reported inconsistent approaches to treatment and a lack of evidence demonstrating clinical effectiveness. This study aimed to combine the best available research evidence with stakeholder perspectives to develop key components of an optimised physiotherapist-led treatment protocol for testing in a future randomised controlled trial (RCT).
    Design: Online consensus groups using nominal group technique (NGT), a systematic approach to building consensus using structured multistage meetings.
    Setting: UK National Health Service (NHS).
    Participants: 10 physiotherapists with special interest in LET, 2 physiotherapy service managers and 3 patients who had experienced LET.
    Interventions: Two consensus groups were conducted; the first meeting focused on agreeing the types of interventions to be included in the optimised treatment protocol; the second meeting focused on specific details of intervention delivery. Participants were sent an evidence summary of available treatments for LET prior to the first meeting. All treatment options were discussed before anonymous voting and ranking of priority. Consensus for inclusion of each treatment option was set at ≥70% based on OMERACT guidelines. Options with 30%-69% agreement were discussed again, and a second vote was held, allowing for a change of opinion.
    Results: The optimised physiotherapist-led treatment package included: advice and education, exercise therapy and orthotics. Specific components for each of these interventions were also agreed such as: condition-specific advice, health-promotion advice, exercise types, exercise into 'acceptable' levels of pain, exercise dosage and type of orthoses. Other treatment options including electrotherapy, acupuncture and manual therapy were excluded.
    Conclusion: An optimised physiotherapist-led treatment protocol for people with LET was successfully developed using an online NGT consensus approach. This intervention is now ready for testing in a future pilot/feasibility RCT to contribute much needed evidence about the treatment of LET.
    Trial registration number: This is the pre-cursor to the OPTimisE Pilot and Feasibility Randomised Controlled Trial. Registration: https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN64444585.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Clinical Protocols ; Elbow Tendinopathy ; Exercise Therapy/methods ; Humans ; Physical Therapists ; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ; Tendinopathy/therapy
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2021-12-23
    Erscheinungsland England
    Dokumenttyp Clinical Trial Protocol ; Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2599832-8
    ISSN 2044-6055 ; 2044-6055
    ISSN (online) 2044-6055
    ISSN 2044-6055
    DOI 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-053841
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  9. Artikel ; Online: Validation of the German version of the STarT-MSK-Tool: A cohort study with patients from physiotherapy clinics.

    Karstens, Sven / Zebisch, Jochen / Wey, Johannes / Hilfiker, Roger / Hill, Jonathan C

    PloS one

    2022  Band 17, Heft 7, Seite(n) e0269694

    Abstract: Background: The STarT-MSK-Tool is an adaptation of the well established STarT-Back-Tool, used to risk-stratify patients with a wider range of musculoskeletal presentations.: Objective: To formally translate and cross-culturally adapt the Keele STarT- ... ...

    Abstract Background: The STarT-MSK-Tool is an adaptation of the well established STarT-Back-Tool, used to risk-stratify patients with a wider range of musculoskeletal presentations.
    Objective: To formally translate and cross-culturally adapt the Keele STarT-MSK risk stratification tool into German (STarT-MSKG) and to establish its reliability and validity.
    Methods: A formal, multi-step, forward and backward translation approach was used. To assess validity patients aged ≥18 years, with acute, subacute or chronic musculoskeletal presentations in the lumbar spine, hip, knee, shoulder, or neck were included. The prospective cohort was used with initial data collected electronically at the point-of-consultation. Retest and 6-month follow-up questionnaires were sent by email. Test-retest reliability, construct validity, discriminative ability, predictive ability and floor or ceiling effects were analysed using intraclass correlation coefficient, and comparisons with a reference standard (Orebro-Musculoskeletal-Pain-Questionnaire: OMPQ) using correlations, ROC-curves and regression models.
    Results: The participants' (n = 287) mean age was 47 (SD = 15.8) years, 51% were female, with 48.8% at low, 43.6% at medium, and 7.7% at high risk. With ICC = 0.75 (95% CI 0.69; 0.81) test-retest-reliability was good. Construct validity was good with correlations for the STarT-MSKG-Tool against the OMPQ-Tool of rs = 0.74 (95% CI 0.68, 0.79). The ability of the tool [comparison OMPQ] to predict 6-month pain and disability was acceptable with AUC = 0.77 (95% CI 0.71, 0.83) [OMPQ = 0.74] and 0.76 (95% CI 0.69, 0.82) [OMPQ = 0.72] respectively. However, the explained variance (linear/logistic regression) for predicting 6-month pain (21% [OMPQ = 17%]/logistic = 29%) and disability (linear = 20%:[OMPQ = 19%]/logistic = 26%), whilst being comparable to the existing OMPQ reference standard, fell short of the a priori target of ≥30%.
    Conclusions: The German version of the STarT-MSK-Tool is a valid instrument for use across multiple musculoskeletal conditions and is availabe for use in clinical practice. Comparison with the OMPQ suggests it is a good alternative.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Adolescent ; Adult ; Cohort Studies ; Female ; Humans ; Low Back Pain ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Musculoskeletal Pain ; Physical Therapy Modalities ; Prospective Studies ; Reproducibility of Results
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2022-07-01
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2267670-3
    ISSN 1932-6203 ; 1932-6203
    ISSN (online) 1932-6203
    ISSN 1932-6203
    DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0269694
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  10. Artikel ; Online: Are Small Effects for Back Pain Interventions Really Surprising?

    Hancock, Mark J / Hill, Jonathan C

    The Journal of orthopaedic and sports physical therapy

    2016  Band 46, Heft 5, Seite(n) 317–319

    Abstract: There is reasonably strong evidence that some physical therapy interventions are effective (compared to minimal or no intervention) for patients with low back pain (LBP); however, the effect sizes are typically small. Many clinicians argue that this ... ...

    Abstract There is reasonably strong evidence that some physical therapy interventions are effective (compared to minimal or no intervention) for patients with low back pain (LBP); however, the effect sizes are typically small. Many clinicians argue that this evidence is at odds with their daily clinical experience. There are several reasons that likely contribute to small effects in clinical trials of LBP and other musculoskeletal conditions. In this Viewpoint, the authors look at which of these reasons are beyond our control as clinicians and simply need to be acknowledged and understood, and which may provide insights into improving the design of future clinical trials of LBP and ultimately delivering better care to our patients. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther 2016;46(5):317-319. doi:10.2519/jospt.2016.0604.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Clinical Trials as Topic ; Humans ; Low Back Pain/therapy ; Patient Reported Outcome Measures ; Physical Therapy Modalities ; Research Design ; Treatment Outcome
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2016-05
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 604640-x
    ISSN 1938-1344 ; 0190-6011
    ISSN (online) 1938-1344
    ISSN 0190-6011
    DOI 10.2519/jospt.2016.0604
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