𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
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A primary care back pain screening tool: Identifying patient subgroups for initial treatment

✍ Scribed by Hill, Jonathan C. ;Dunn, Kate M. ;Lewis, Martyn ;Mullis, Ricky ;Main, Chris J. ;Foster, Nadine E. ;Hay, Elaine M.


Book ID
101654100
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
125 KB
Volume
59
Category
Article
ISSN
0004-3591

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Objective

To develop and validate a tool that screens for back pain prognostic indicators relevant to initial decision making in primary care.

Methods

The setting was UK primary care adults with nonspecific back pain. Constructs that were independent prognostic indicators for persistence were identified from secondary analysis of 2 existing cohorts and published literature. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis identified single screening questions for relevant constructs. Psychometric properties of the tool, including concurrent and discriminant validity, internal consistency, and repeatability, were assessed within a new development sample (n = 131) and tool score cutoffs were established to enable allocation to 3 subgroups (low, medium, and high risk). Predictive and external validity were evaluated within an independent external sample (n = 500).

Results

The tool included 9 items: referred leg pain, comorbid pain, disability (2 items), bothersomeness, catastrophizing, fear, anxiety, and depression. The latter 5 items were identified as a psychosocial subscale. The tool demonstrated good reliability and validity and was acceptable to patients and clinicians. Patients scoring 0–3 were classified as low risk, and those scoring 4 or 5 on a psychosocial subscale were classified as high risk. The remainder were classified as medium risk.

Conclusion

We validated a brief screening tool, which is a promising instrument for identifying subgroups of patients to guide the provision of early secondary prevention in primary care. Further work will establish whether allocation to treatment subgroups using the tool, linked with targeting treatment appropriately, improves patient outcomes.


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Prevalence of and screening for serious
✍ Nicholas Henschke; Christopher G. Maher; Kathryn M. Refshauge; Robert D. Herbert πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 2009 πŸ› John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English βš– 230 KB πŸ‘ 2 views

## Abstract ## Objective To determine the prevalence of serious pathology in patients presenting to primary care settings with acute low back pain, and to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of recommended β€œred flag” screening questions. ## Methods An inception cohort of 1,172 consecutive patients