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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 26 - 26
1 Feb 2014
Lonsdale C Hall A Williams GC McDonough SM Ntoumanis N Murray A Hurley DA
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Purpose of the study and background

Physical activity and exercise therapy are among the guideline recommendations for the rehabilitation of people with chronic low back pain (CLBP ≥ 3 months); however, patient adherence is often poor. CONNECT is a theory-based communication skills training programme designed to enhance physiotherapists' support of their CLBP patients' psychological needs in order to increase adherence to their home-based rehabilitation programme.

Methods and results

The CONNECT trial [Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN63723433] included six Dublin-area public clinics and their physiotherapists (n = 24) who received eight hours of communication skills training from a psychologist [experimental group] and physiotherapists (n = 26) from six equivalent clinics who formed a treatment as usual pragmatic control condition. New patients (n = 255, 54% female) diagnosed with CLBP and receiving physiotherapy at one of these clinics completed ratings of home-based adherence at 1, 4, 12, and 24 weeks after their initial treatment session; 24 weeks was the primary endpoint. Due to the nature of the intervention, physiotherapists were aware of treatment allocation; patients and assessors were blinded. Intention to treat analysis using a linear mixed model approach indicated that patients in the experimental group rated their home-based adherence significantly higher than patients in the control condition across time-points (P = .01), but the difference was not significant at the 24-week follow-up (P > .05).