Bury Integrated Pain Service, Radcliffe Primary Care Centre, Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK.
Department of Sport & Exercise Sciences, Faculty of Science & Engineering, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK.
Musculoskeletal Care. 2024 Sep;22(3):e1929. doi: 10.1002/msc.1929.
Following the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic and associated social distancing requirements, Pain Services were no longer able to deliver face-to-face Pain Management Programmes (PMP). As an alternative, the Bury Integrated Pain Service developed an interactive, online programme, delivered via Microsoft Teams videoconferencing technology. However, the efficacy of such programmes is unclear. The aim of this project was to assess whether comparable results were observed with online PMPs as with face-to-face PMPs.
A non-inferiority study comparing patients attending an online PMP to a historical cohort of patients attending face-to-face PMPs. Analyses of variance were performed to assess between group differences and chi squared tests to compare the proportion of patients making clinically meaningful changes in pain, musculoskeletal health, anxiety, depression and self-efficacy.
24% of patients (n = 9) deemed suitable for the online PMP were unable to participate due to technological difficulties. This resulted in 28 people attending the online PMP. Greater mean reductions in anxiety (GAD-7 mean difference = 1.9; p < 0.05) and depression (PHQ-9 mean difference 3.3; p < 0.05) were observed with face-to-face PMP and a greater proportion of patients made clinically meaningful improvements in musculoskeletal health (face-to-face = 13; online = 5), anxiety (face-to-face = 7; online = 1), and depression (face-to-face = 11; online = 2).
Some patients appear to obtain significant benefit from online PMPs, but this appeared to be to a lesser extent than face-to-face PMPs. It is possible that factors related to the experience of the pandemic influenced these results. However, online PMPs appear to show some promise and further research is warranted to explore the value of online PMPs.
随着新冠疫情的爆发和相关的社交距离要求,疼痛服务不再能够提供面对面的疼痛管理计划(PMP)。作为替代方案,伯里综合疼痛服务开发了一个互动的在线计划,通过 Microsoft Teams 视频会议技术提供。然而,此类计划的疗效尚不清楚。该项目的目的是评估在线 PMP 是否与面对面 PMP 观察到可比的结果。
一项非劣效性研究,比较参加在线 PMP 的患者与参加面对面 PMP 的历史队列患者。进行方差分析以评估组间差异,并进行卡方检验以比较疼痛、肌肉骨骼健康、焦虑、抑郁和自我效能方面有临床意义的变化的患者比例。
24%(n=9)认为适合参加在线 PMP 的患者因技术困难而无法参加。这导致 28 人参加了在线 PMP。面对面 PMP 观察到焦虑(GAD-7 平均差异=1.9;p<0.05)和抑郁(PHQ-9 平均差异 3.3;p<0.05)的平均降低幅度更大,并且有更多的患者在肌肉骨骼健康(面对面=13;在线=5)、焦虑(面对面=7;在线=1)和抑郁(面对面=11;在线=2)方面取得了有临床意义的改善。
一些患者似乎从在线 PMP 中获得了显著的益处,但程度低于面对面 PMP。可能与大流行经历相关的因素影响了这些结果。然而,在线 PMP 似乎显示出一些希望,需要进一步研究探索在线 PMP 的价值。