Poitras Stéphane, Rossignol Michel, Dionne Clermont, Tousignant Michel, Truchon Manon, Arsenault Bertrand, Allard Pierre, Coté Manon, Neveu Alain
Montreal Department of Public Health, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2008 Apr 21;9:54. doi: 10.1186/1471-2474-9-54.
Low-back pain is responsible for significant disability and costs in industrialized countries. Only a minority of subjects suffering from low-back pain will develop persistent disability. However, this minority is responsible for the majority of costs and has the poorest health outcomes. The objective of the Clinic on Low-back pain in Interdisciplinary Practice (CLIP) project was to develop a primary care interdisciplinary practice model for the clinical management of low-back pain and the prevention of persistent disability.
Using previously published guidelines, systematic reviews and meta-analyses, a clinical management model for low-back pain was developed by the project team. A structured process facilitating discussions on this model among researchers, stakeholders and clinicians was created. The model was revised following these exchanges, without deviating from the evidence.
A model consisting of nine elements on clinical management of low-back pain and prevention of persistent disability was developed. The model's two core elements for the prevention of persistent disability are the following: 1) the evaluation of the prognosis at the fourth week of disability, and of key modifiable barriers to return to usual activities if the prognosis is unfavourable; 2) the evaluation of the patient's perceived disability every four weeks, with the evaluation and management of barriers to return to usual activities if perceived disability has not sufficiently improved.
A primary care interdisciplinary model aimed at improving quality and continuity of care for patients with low-back pain was developed. The effectiveness, efficiency and applicability of the CLIP model in preventing persistent disability in patients suffering from low-back pain should be assessed.
在工业化国家,腰痛导致了严重的残疾和高昂的成本。只有少数腰痛患者会发展为持续性残疾。然而,这少数患者却产生了大部分成本,且健康结局最差。跨学科实践腰痛诊所(CLIP)项目的目标是开发一种初级保健跨学科实践模式,用于腰痛的临床管理和持续性残疾的预防。
项目团队利用先前发表的指南、系统评价和荟萃分析,开发了一种腰痛临床管理模式。创建了一个结构化流程,以促进研究人员、利益相关者和临床医生就该模式进行讨论。在这些交流之后对该模式进行了修订,且未偏离证据。
开发了一个由九个要素组成的腰痛临床管理和持续性残疾预防模式。该模式预防持续性残疾的两个核心要素如下:1)在残疾第四周评估预后,以及在预后不佳时评估影响恢复日常活动的关键可改变障碍;2)每四周评估患者感知到的残疾情况,若感知到的残疾没有充分改善,则评估并管理影响恢复日常活动的障碍。
开发了一种旨在提高腰痛患者护理质量和连续性的初级保健跨学科模式。应评估CLIP模式在预防腰痛患者持续性残疾方面的有效性、效率和适用性。