Faculty of Health Science and Medicine, Bond Institute of Health and Sport, Bond University, Robina, Australia.
Faculty of Medicine and Health, Sydney School of Health Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Phys Ther. 2023 Dec 6;103(12). doi: 10.1093/ptj/pzad088.
Rotator cuff-related shoulder pain (RCRSP) is the most common form of shoulder pain. Exercise therapy is a first-line recommended treatment for RCRSP. However, the causal mechanisms underpinning the benefits of exercise for RCRSP are not well understood. Moreover, how individuals with lived experience of RCRSP believe exercise helped or did not help them is unknown. This study aimed to gain insights into how individuals with RCRSP believe exercise influenced their shoulder pain and identify the clinical conditions that promoted or inhibited their beliefs.
This qualitative study was underpinned by a critical realist approach to thematic analysis. Participants were recruited using hybrid purposive and convenience sampling techniques. Each participant attended an online semi-structured interview. The data were coded by 2 members of the research team (J.K.P. and N.C.) and verified by a third (B.S.). Recruitment continued until theoretical sufficiency was achieved. Participants reviewed and validated preliminary causal explanations.
Three causal explanations were consistently expressed by 11 participants to explain the benefits of exercise therapy: (1) shoulder strength; (2) changes to psychoemotional status; and (3) exercise has widespread health effects. However, the activation of these causal mechanisms depended on (1) the presence of a strong therapeutic relationship; (2) the provision of a structured and tailored exercise program; and (3) experiencing timely clinical progress.
Participants believed exercise improved their shoulder pain through associated health benefits, improved shoulder strength, and psychoemotional variables. Whether an exercise program was able to cause a clinical improvement for an individual with RCRSP was contingent on clinical contextual features. Thus, the clinical context that an exercise program is delivered within may be just as important as the exercise program itself.
Exercise is a recommended first-line intervention to manage RCRSP. The results of this study suggest that a positive experience and outcome with exercise for RCRSP is contingent on several clinical contextual features, such as a strong therapeutic relationship. The clinical context that an exercise program is prescribed and delivered within should be considered by clinicians.
肩袖相关肩痛(RCRSP)是最常见的肩部疼痛形式。运动疗法是 RCRSP 的一线推荐治疗方法。然而,对于运动治疗 RCRSP 益处的潜在机制尚不清楚。此外,患有 RCRSP 的个体如何认为运动对他们的肩部疼痛有帮助或没有帮助也不得而知。本研究旨在深入了解患有 RCRSP 的个体如何认为运动影响他们的肩部疼痛,并确定促进或抑制他们信念的临床条件。
本定性研究基于对主题分析的批判现实主义方法。参与者采用混合目的和便利抽样技术招募。每位参与者参加一次在线半结构化访谈。研究团队的 2 名成员(J.K.P.和 N.C.)对数据进行编码,并由第 3 名成员(B.S.)进行验证。招募工作一直持续到达到理论充足性为止。参与者审查和验证了初步的因果解释。
11 名参与者一致表达了三个因果解释,以解释运动疗法的益处:(1)肩部力量;(2)心理情绪状态的变化;(3)运动具有广泛的健康影响。然而,这些因果机制的激活取决于:(1)存在强大的治疗关系;(2)提供结构化和量身定制的运动计划;(3)及时体验临床进展。
参与者认为运动通过相关的健康益处、改善肩部力量和心理情绪变量来改善肩部疼痛。对于患有 RCRSP 的个体,运动计划是否能够引起临床改善取决于临床背景特征。因此,运动计划所处的临床背景可能与运动计划本身同样重要。
运动是管理 RCRSP 的一线推荐干预措施。本研究的结果表明,对于 RCRSP 的运动治疗的积极体验和结果取决于几个临床背景特征,例如强大的治疗关系。临床医生应考虑为患者规定和提供运动计划的临床背景。