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Review
. 2023 Jul 1;103(7):pzad047.
doi: 10.1093/ptj/pzad047.

Psychologically Informed Practice: The Importance of Communication in Clinical Implementation

Affiliations
Review

Psychologically Informed Practice: The Importance of Communication in Clinical Implementation

Chris J Main et al. Phys Ther. .

Abstract

There has been increasing interest in the secondary prevention of chronic pain and pain-associated disability over the past 3 decades. In 2011, psychologically informed practice (PiP) was suggested as a framework for managing persistent and recurrent pain, and, since then, it has underpinned the development of stratified care linking risk identification (screening). Although PiP research trials have demonstrated clinical and economic advantage over usual care, pragmatic studies have been less successful, and qualitative studies have identified implementation difficulties in both system delivery and individual clinical management. Effort has been put into the development of screening tools, the development of training, and the assessment of outcomes; however, the nature of the consultation has remained relatively unexplored. In this Perspective, a review of the nature of clinical consultations and the clinician-patient relationship is followed by reflections on the nature of communication and the outcome of training courses. Consideration is given to the optimization of communication, including the use of standardized patient-reported measures and the role of the therapist in facilitating adaptive behavior change. Several challenges in implementing a PiP approach in day-to-day practice are then considered. Following brief consideration of the impact of recent developments in health care, the Perspective concludes with a brief introduction to the PiP Consultation Roadmap (the subject of a companion paper), the use of which is suggested as a way of structuring the consultation with the flexibility required for a patient-centered approach to guided self-management of chronic pain conditions.

Keywords: Communication; Pain; Psychologically Informed Practice.

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Figures

Figure
Figure
The influence of negative expectations (catastrophizing) and positive expectations (self-efficacy) on recovery.

References

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