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. 2004 Sep 1;29(17):E357-62.
doi: 10.1097/01.brs.0000137056.64166.51.

Quality of primary care guidelines for acute low back pain

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Quality of primary care guidelines for acute low back pain

Maurits W van Tulder et al. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). .

Abstract

Study design: Systematic review of clinical guidelines.

Objectives: To assess the methodologic quality of existing guidelines for the management of acute low back pain.

Summary of background data: Guidelines are playing an increasingly important role in evidence-based practice. After publication of the Quebec Task Force in Canada in 1987 and the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research guidelines in the United States in 1994, guidelines for acute low back pain were developed in many other countries. However, little is known about the methodologic quality of these guidelines.

Methods: Guidelines were selected by electronically searching MEDLINE and the Internet and through personal communication with experts in the field of low back pain research in primary care. The methodologic quality of the guidelines was assessed by two authors independently using the AGREE instrument.

Results: A total of 17 guidelines were included. Overall, the quality of reporting of guidelines was disappointing. Most guidelines clearly described the aim of the guideline and its target population, and most guideline development committees were multiprofessional. However, many other methodologic flaws were identified. More than half of the guidelines did not take patients' preferences into account, did not perform a pilot test among target users, did not clearly describe the methods of study identification and selection, did not include an external review, did not provide a procedure for updating, were not supported with tools for application, did not consider potential organizational barriers and cost implications, did not provide criteria for monitoring and audit, did not include recommendations for implementation strategies, and did not adequately record editorial independence and conflict of interest of the members. The diagnostic and therapeutic recommendations of the guidelines were largely similar.

Conclusions: The quality and transparency of the development process and the consistency in the reporting of primary care guidelines for low back pain need to be improved.

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