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Clinical Trial
. 1999 Dec 1;24(23):2484-91.
doi: 10.1097/00007632-199912010-00010.

Information and advice to patients with back pain can have a positive effect. A randomized controlled trial of a novel educational booklet in primary care

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Information and advice to patients with back pain can have a positive effect. A randomized controlled trial of a novel educational booklet in primary care

A K Burton et al. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). .

Abstract

Study design: A double-blind, randomized controlled trial of a novel educational booklet compared with a traditional booklet for patients seeking treatment in primary care for acute or recurrent low back pain.

Objective: To test the impact of a novel educational booklet on patients' beliefs about back pain and functional outcome.

Summary of background data: The information and advice that health professionals give to patients may be important in health care intervention, but there is little scientific evidence of their effectiveness. A novel patient educational booklet, The Back Book, has been developed to provide evidence-based information and advice consistent with current clinical guidelines.

Methods: One hundred sixty-two patients were given either the experimental booklet or a traditional booklet. The main outcomes studied were fear-avoidance beliefs about physical activity, beliefs about the inevitable consequences of back trouble, the Roland Disability Questionnaire, and visual analogue pain scales. Postal follow-up response at 1 year after initial treatment was 78%.

Results: Patients receiving the experimental booklet showed a statistically significant greater early improvement in beliefs which was maintained at 1 year. A greater proportion of patients with an initially high fear-avoidance beliefs score who received the experimental booklet had clinically important improvement in fear-avoidance beliefs about physical activity at 2 weeks, followed by a clinically important improvement in the Roland Disability Questionnaire score at 3 months. There was no effect on pain.

Conclusion: This trial shows that carefully selected and presented information and advice about back pain can have a positive effect on patients' beliefs and clinical outcomes, and suggests that a study of clinically important effects in individual patients may provide further insights into the management of low back pain.

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