22 research outputs found

    Wirksamkeit, Zweckmäßigkeit und Wirtschaftlichkeit des multimodalen Behandlungsansatzes bei chronisch lumbalen Rückenschmerzen

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    Zusammenfassung: Hintergrund: Der Nachweis der Behandlungskriterien Wirksamkeit, Zweckmäßigkeit und Wirtschaftlichkeit ist bei chronisch lumbalen Rückenschmerzen ["chronic low back pain" (CLBP)] notwendig, da Kostenträger die Übernahme von Behandlungskosten hiervon abhängig machen. Material und Methoden: Eine systematische Literatursuche zu den Behandlungskriterien der interdisziplinären, multimodalen Schmerztherapie ["multidisciplinary treatment" (MDT)] bietet einen Überblick über die aktuelle Literatur zur Behandlung von CLBP. Ergebnisse: Auf die moderate Wirksamkeit von MDT weisen 8Übersichtsarbeiten hin, wenn auch mit einigen Einschränkungen. Die Ergebnisse von 6 bisher in keine Übersichtsarbeit eingeschlossenen Originalarbeiten stützen die Ergebnisse der Übersichtsarbeiten. Die Langzeitergebnisse von MDT und operativen Behandlungen sind, bei höheren Kosten und Risiken für operative Behandlungen, vergleichbar. Die Wirtschaftlichkeit von MDT erreicht in 3Originalarbeiten eine moderate bis hohe Evidenz. Schlussfolgerungen: MDT sind sowohl moderat wirksam als auch wirtschaftlich. Daher sind sie eine kostengünstigere Behandlungsalternative zu operativen Verfahre

    Baseline musculoskeletal pain and impaired sleep related to school pressure influence the development of musculoskeletal pain in N = 107 adolescents in a 5-year longitudinal study

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    Purpose: This longitudinal study followed 10- to 13-year-old adolescents for five years to investigate the effects of juvenile musculoskeletal (MSK) pain and psychosocial risk factors on future pain. We further predicted that increased MSK pain at follow-up would be positively related to current school pressure at follow-up and negatively related to current sleep quality. Sleep quality was tested as a potential mediator of the link between school pressure and MSK pain at follow-up after controlling for baseline MSK pain. Methods: The baseline sample comprised 189 adolescents and five-year follow-up resulted in 107 15- to 18-year-old adolescents who had completed mandatory education. Adolescents responded to an online questionnaire about psychosocial stressors, MSK pain, school achievement, and leisure activities. A longitudinal hierarchic linear regression including all significant baseline predictors was run to assess their impact on MSK pain five years later. Mediation analysis was used to investigate sleep quality as a potential mediator of the relationship between school pressure and MSK pain at follow-up. Results: Baseline MSK pain predicted MSK pain over a time lag of five years (ß = .26, p = .02). The relationship between follow-up school pressure and current MSK pain was mediated by sleep quality at follow-up (B = .17, SEB = .07, CI-95 = .06 to .34) when baseline MSK pain was controlled. Conclusions: Juvenile MSK pain predicts MSK pain in adolescence. A psychosocial mediation model including school pressure and sleep impairments has the potential to explain MSK pain mechanisms in adolescents

    Resources for preventing sickness absence due to low back pain

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    Background After an episode of non-specific low back pain (LBP) some individuals fail to return to work. The factors leading to such LBP-related sickness absence are not yet fully understood. Aims To identify individual resources, over and above the already established predictors, for preventing LBP-related sickness absence in a population-based sample of workers experiencing an episode of LBP. Methods Cohort study with 1-year follow-up. Participants were from a working population who reported an episode of acute or subacute LBP at baseline. Four potential resources—life satisfaction, doing sports, job satisfaction and social support at work—were examined for their incremental value in predicting sickness absence over and above baseline sickness absence and fear-avoidance beliefs about work. Results In all, 279 workers participated in the study. All four resources showed an inverse relationship with regard to sickness absence. A multiple regression analysis revealed that life satisfaction as a resource protected against sickness absence, when controlling for established risk factors. Job satisfaction and social support at work minimized the influence of sickness absence at baseline and at 1-year follow-up. Conclusions In a non-clinical working sample of individuals experiencing an acute/subacute episode of LBP, life satisfaction was a unique predictor of sickness absence after 1 year. Prevention in the occupational setting should not only address common risk factors but also occupational and individual resources that keep workers satisfied with life despite having LB

    Identification of prognostic factors for chronicity in patients with low back pain: a review of screening instruments

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    Low back pain (LBP) is currently the most prevalent and costly musculoskeletal problem in modern societies. Screening instruments for the identification of prognostic factors in LBP may help to identify patients with an unfavourable outcome. In this systematic review screening instruments published between 1970 and 2007 were identified by a literature search. Nine different instruments were analysed and their different items grouped into ten structures. Finally, the predictive effectiveness of these structures was examined for the dependent variables including "work status", "functional limitation”, and "pain". The strongest predictors for "work status” were psychosocial and occupational structures, whereas for "functional limitation” and "pain” psychological structures were dominating. Psychological and occupational factors show a high reliability for the prognosis of patients with LBP. Screening instruments for the identification of prognostic factors in patients with LBP should include these factors as a minimum core se

    Profiling Police Forces against Stress: Risk and Protective Factors for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Burnout in Police Officers

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    Police officers are frequently exposed to highly stressful situations at work and have an increased risk to develop symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and burnout (BO). It is currently not well understood which officers are most at risk to develop these disorders. The aim of this study was to determine which coping strategies and personality traits could act as protective or risk factors in relation to PTSD and BO. The second aim, in the interest of designating preventive and therapeutical measures, was to determine whether certain profiles of police officers could be identified as high risk for developing mental disorders. Herein, 1073 French-speaking police officers in Switzerland reported in an online survey about their PTSD and BO symptoms, anxiety, depression, suicide ideation, coping strategies, occupational stress, and personality factors. The cluster analysis highlighted three principal profiles of police officers: those who are not at risk of developing pathologies because they are not exposed or insensitive to these stressors, and those who are, among which personality and coping strategies oriented the risk of developing PTSD or BO. These same protective and risk factors were also corroborated in the linear and logistic regression analyses. These results may suggest that a crucial opportunity for mitigating mental health issues in the force could consist of screening recruits for risk-related personality traits and orienting them towards psychological training programs for the development of functional coping strategies
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