Promoting the use of self-management in patients with spine pain managed by chiropractors and chiropractic interns: barriers and design of a theory-based knowledge translation intervention

Abstract Background The literature supports the effectiveness of self-management support (SMS) to improve health outcomes of patients with chronic spine pain. However, patient engagement in SMS programs is suboptimal. The objectives of this study were to: 1) assess participation in self-care (i.e. a...

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Main Authors: Owis Eilayyan, Aliki Thomas, Marie-Christine Hallé, Sara Ahmed, Anthony C. Tibbles, Craig Jacobs, Silvano Mior, Connie Davis, Roni Evans, Michael J. Schneider, Heather Owens, Fadi Al Zoubi, Jan Barnsley, Cynthia R. Long, Andre Bussières
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-10-01
Series:Chiropractic & Manual Therapies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12998-019-0267-6
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spelling doaj-a4ceb919e4cf43659d7ab6360b64a97d2020-11-25T03:45:08ZengBMCChiropractic & Manual Therapies2045-709X2019-10-0127111310.1186/s12998-019-0267-6Promoting the use of self-management in patients with spine pain managed by chiropractors and chiropractic interns: barriers and design of a theory-based knowledge translation interventionOwis Eilayyan0Aliki Thomas1Marie-Christine Hallé2Sara Ahmed3Anthony C. Tibbles4Craig Jacobs5Silvano Mior6Connie Davis7Roni Evans8Michael J. Schneider9Heather Owens10Fadi Al Zoubi11Jan Barnsley12Cynthia R. Long13Andre Bussières14School of Physical and Occupational Therapy, McGill UniversitySchool of Physical and Occupational Therapy, McGill UniversitySchool of Physical and Occupational Therapy, McGill UniversitySchool of Physical and Occupational Therapy, McGill UniversityCanadian Memorial Chiropractic CollegeCanadian Memorial Chiropractic CollegeCanadian Memorial Chiropractic CollegeUniversity of British ColumbiaUniversity of MinnesotaUniversity of PittsburghSchool of Physical and Occupational Therapy, McGill UniversitySchool of Physical and Occupational Therapy, McGill UniversityUniversity of TorontoPalmer CollegeSchool of Physical and Occupational Therapy, McGill UniversityAbstract Background The literature supports the effectiveness of self-management support (SMS) to improve health outcomes of patients with chronic spine pain. However, patient engagement in SMS programs is suboptimal. The objectives of this study were to: 1) assess participation in self-care (i.e. activation) among patients with spine pain, 2) identify patients’ barriers and enablers to using SMS, and 3) map behaviour change techniques (BCTs) to key barriers to inform the design of a knowledge translation (KT) intervention aimed to increase the use of SMS. Methods In summer 2016, we invited 250 patients with spine pain seeking care at the Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College in Ontario, Canada to complete the Patient Activation Measure (PAM) survey to assess the level of participation in self-care. We subsequently conducted individual interviews, in summer 2017, based on the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) in a subset of patients to identify potential challenges to using SMS. The interview guide included 20 open-ended questions and accompanying probes. Findings were deductively analysed guided by the TDF. A panel of 7 experts mapped key barriers to BCTs, designed a KT intervention, and selected the modes of delivery. Results Two hundred and twenty-three patients completed the PAM. Approximately 24% of respondents were not actively involved in their care. Interview findings from 13 spine pain patients suggested that the potential barriers to using SMS corresponded to four TDF domains: Environmental Context and Resources; Emotion; Memory, Attention & Decision-Making; and Behavioural Regulation. The proposed theory-based KT intervention includes paper-based educational materials, webinars and videos, summarising and demonstrating the therapeutic recommendations including exercises and other lifestyle changes. In addition, the KT intervention includes Brief Action Planning, a SMS strategy based on motivational interviewing, along with a SMART plan and reminders. Conclusions Almost one quarter of study participants were not actively engaged in their spine care. Key barriers likely to influence uptake of SMS among patients were identified and used to inform the design of a theory-based KT intervention to increase their participation level. The proposed multi-component KT intervention may be an effective strategy to optimize the quality of spine pain care and improve patients’ health-outcomes.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12998-019-0267-6Spine painChiropracticSelf-managementTheory-based interventionKnowledge translationTheoretical domains framework
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Owis Eilayyan
Aliki Thomas
Marie-Christine Hallé
Sara Ahmed
Anthony C. Tibbles
Craig Jacobs
Silvano Mior
Connie Davis
Roni Evans
Michael J. Schneider
Heather Owens
Fadi Al Zoubi
Jan Barnsley
Cynthia R. Long
Andre Bussières
spellingShingle Owis Eilayyan
Aliki Thomas
Marie-Christine Hallé
Sara Ahmed
Anthony C. Tibbles
Craig Jacobs
Silvano Mior
Connie Davis
Roni Evans
Michael J. Schneider
Heather Owens
Fadi Al Zoubi
Jan Barnsley
Cynthia R. Long
Andre Bussières
Promoting the use of self-management in patients with spine pain managed by chiropractors and chiropractic interns: barriers and design of a theory-based knowledge translation intervention
Chiropractic & Manual Therapies
Spine pain
Chiropractic
Self-management
Theory-based intervention
Knowledge translation
Theoretical domains framework
author_facet Owis Eilayyan
Aliki Thomas
Marie-Christine Hallé
Sara Ahmed
Anthony C. Tibbles
Craig Jacobs
Silvano Mior
Connie Davis
Roni Evans
Michael J. Schneider
Heather Owens
Fadi Al Zoubi
Jan Barnsley
Cynthia R. Long
Andre Bussières
author_sort Owis Eilayyan
title Promoting the use of self-management in patients with spine pain managed by chiropractors and chiropractic interns: barriers and design of a theory-based knowledge translation intervention
title_short Promoting the use of self-management in patients with spine pain managed by chiropractors and chiropractic interns: barriers and design of a theory-based knowledge translation intervention
title_full Promoting the use of self-management in patients with spine pain managed by chiropractors and chiropractic interns: barriers and design of a theory-based knowledge translation intervention
title_fullStr Promoting the use of self-management in patients with spine pain managed by chiropractors and chiropractic interns: barriers and design of a theory-based knowledge translation intervention
title_full_unstemmed Promoting the use of self-management in patients with spine pain managed by chiropractors and chiropractic interns: barriers and design of a theory-based knowledge translation intervention
title_sort promoting the use of self-management in patients with spine pain managed by chiropractors and chiropractic interns: barriers and design of a theory-based knowledge translation intervention
publisher BMC
series Chiropractic & Manual Therapies
issn 2045-709X
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Abstract Background The literature supports the effectiveness of self-management support (SMS) to improve health outcomes of patients with chronic spine pain. However, patient engagement in SMS programs is suboptimal. The objectives of this study were to: 1) assess participation in self-care (i.e. activation) among patients with spine pain, 2) identify patients’ barriers and enablers to using SMS, and 3) map behaviour change techniques (BCTs) to key barriers to inform the design of a knowledge translation (KT) intervention aimed to increase the use of SMS. Methods In summer 2016, we invited 250 patients with spine pain seeking care at the Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College in Ontario, Canada to complete the Patient Activation Measure (PAM) survey to assess the level of participation in self-care. We subsequently conducted individual interviews, in summer 2017, based on the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) in a subset of patients to identify potential challenges to using SMS. The interview guide included 20 open-ended questions and accompanying probes. Findings were deductively analysed guided by the TDF. A panel of 7 experts mapped key barriers to BCTs, designed a KT intervention, and selected the modes of delivery. Results Two hundred and twenty-three patients completed the PAM. Approximately 24% of respondents were not actively involved in their care. Interview findings from 13 spine pain patients suggested that the potential barriers to using SMS corresponded to four TDF domains: Environmental Context and Resources; Emotion; Memory, Attention & Decision-Making; and Behavioural Regulation. The proposed theory-based KT intervention includes paper-based educational materials, webinars and videos, summarising and demonstrating the therapeutic recommendations including exercises and other lifestyle changes. In addition, the KT intervention includes Brief Action Planning, a SMS strategy based on motivational interviewing, along with a SMART plan and reminders. Conclusions Almost one quarter of study participants were not actively engaged in their spine care. Key barriers likely to influence uptake of SMS among patients were identified and used to inform the design of a theory-based KT intervention to increase their participation level. The proposed multi-component KT intervention may be an effective strategy to optimize the quality of spine pain care and improve patients’ health-outcomes.
topic Spine pain
Chiropractic
Self-management
Theory-based intervention
Knowledge translation
Theoretical domains framework
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12998-019-0267-6
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