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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 4 - 4
1 Feb 2018
Abbey H Nanke L
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Background

Chronic pain is a complex condition that demonstrates better outcomes in multidisciplinary rehabilitation, typically delivered to groups of patients by tertiary healthcare teams. An inter-disciplinary pain management course for individual patients was developed to increase the scope of physical therapists working in primary care by integrating osteopathic manual therapy with psychological interventions from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), a form of ‘3rd wave’ Cognitive Behaviour Therapy.

Method and Results

A single cohort study with pre-course (n=180) and post-course (n=79) self-report measures (44% response rate) evaluated six week interventions which combined individual manual therapy with self-management, delivered by teams of qualified and student osteopaths. Data included: quality of life (European Quality of Life Questionnaire); pain, mood and coping (Bournemouth Questionnaire); psychological flexibility (Revised Acceptance and Action Questionnaire); and mindfulness (Freiburg Mindfulness Inventory). Participants were predominantly female (68%), unemployed (59%), with an average age of 49 and pain duration of more than 12 months (86%). Commonly reported symptoms were low back pain (82%), neck pain (60%) and multiple sites (86%). At six months, there were statistically significant improvements in all four outcome measures (p<0.0005), with promising effect sizes in quality of life and pain coping (r=0.52) which appeared to be mediated by changes in psychological flexibility.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 44 - 44
1 Feb 2014
Abbey H Nanke L
Full Access

Background

A proportion of patients with low back pain fail to respond to conventional medicine, physical therapy or surgery. Neurophysiological changes occur in chronic pain and research shows that Mindfulness and ‘3rd wave’ Cognitive Behavioural Therapy can help patients with long-term musculoskeletal conditions to live more actively, despite pain. This paper describes the development of the three year ‘OsteoMAP’ project (Osteopathy, Mindfulness and Acceptance Programme) to expand the scope of primary care by integrating these psycho-educational interventions into osteopathic practice.

Methods

A before and after design is being used. Patients with disabling pain for more than six months attend a course of six, individual, one hour sessions, integrating mindfulness and acceptance-based exercises with manual therapy. Questionnaire data collected at the course start and after six months, analysed by an independent group, includes pain-related behaviour (Bournemouth Questionnaire), quality of life (EQ5D), self-efficacy (PSEQ) and mindfulness (MAAS).