Spinal Research Laboratory, Department of Physical Therapy, Stanley Steyer School of Health Professions, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Israel.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technion, Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel.
Musculoskelet Sci Pract. 2022 Jun;59:102551. doi: 10.1016/j.msksp.2022.102551. Epub 2022 Mar 8.
Pain neuroscience education (PNE) programs have become popular among clinicians and are widely promoted through social and mainstream media.
To test the hypothesis that people with persistent pain are likely to express negative attitudes to PNE statements and compare their responses to other social media user groups.
A total of 1319 respondents completed an online survey and were directed into four groups: persistent pain, healthcare professionals with persistent pain, pain-free healthcare professionals, and pain-free controls. The survey included ten statements of popular PNE concepts. Feedback was invited by offering seven attitudinal response categories (three positives, three negatives, and one neutral). A two-step hierarchical regression model was used to assess the likelihood of reporting negatively.
Compared to controls, respondents from the persistent pain group were more likely to report negatively towards all statements (OR 1.6-2.16), except for two statements (#3 and #5). Healthcare professionals were less likely to report negative attitudes for 4 out of 10 statement (OR 0.35-0.58). Health care professionals living with persistent responded to most statements like the pain-free controls (besides statement #2, OR 0.59).
People living with persistent pain are more likely to express negative attitudes to PNE statements on social media, unlike healthcare professionals who were less likely to express negativity. Healthcare professionals living with persistent pain responded to most PNE statements like the pain-free control group. The study's main weaknesses include the lack of psychometric information of the questionnaire used, selection bias, small samples of the healthcare professionals and the overrepresentation of young social media users.
疼痛神经科学教育(PNE)计划在临床医生中很受欢迎,并通过社交媒体和主流媒体广泛推广。
验证这样一个假设,即患有持续性疼痛的人可能对 PNE 陈述持负面态度,并将他们的反应与其他社交媒体用户群体进行比较。
共有 1319 名受访者完成了在线调查,并被分为四组:持续性疼痛组、有持续性疼痛的医疗保健专业人员组、无疼痛的医疗保健专业人员组和无疼痛对照组。调查包括十个流行的 PNE 概念陈述。通过提供七个态度反应类别(三个积极、三个消极和一个中立)来邀请反馈。使用两步分层回归模型来评估报告负面结果的可能性。
与对照组相比,持续性疼痛组的受访者对所有陈述(OR 1.6-2.16)更有可能报告负面结果,除了两个陈述(#3 和 #5)。医疗保健专业人员对 10 个陈述中的 4 个不太可能报告负面态度(OR 0.35-0.58)。患有持续性疼痛的医疗保健专业人员对大多数陈述的反应与无疼痛对照组相似(除了陈述#2,OR 0.59)。
与医疗保健专业人员相比,患有持续性疼痛的人更有可能在社交媒体上对 PNE 陈述表达负面态度,而医疗保健专业人员则不太可能表达负面情绪。患有持续性疼痛的医疗保健专业人员对大多数 PNE 陈述的反应与无疼痛对照组相似。本研究的主要弱点包括所使用问卷缺乏心理计量学信息、选择偏差、医疗保健专业人员样本较小以及年轻社交媒体用户的代表性过高。