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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 91-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 493 - 493
1 Sep 2009
Pither C Foell J van der Merwe J Godwin P O’Dowd J White L
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Education is now recognised as a crucial component of the management of non specific low back pain. Mostly education is carried out informally in one to one consultations with health professionals. This has draw backs as it is costly, time limited, labour intensive and biased towards the discipline, training and beliefs of the clinician. The Back Book is a realistic alternative but provides very generic neutral information mostly promoting the message that pain isn’t damage.

We would see the process as one of the facilitation of knowledge acquisition rather than a formal teaching process. The latter implies engagement and responsibility on the part of the learner, rather than a pedagogic exercise by clinician or therapist.

We propose a group based, community delivered, interdisciplinary education module in which 4 different specialists contribute to an afternoon information session aimed at informing patients about: the causes of back pain from a non disease perspective, the complexity of pain perception, the biopsychosocial model, evidence based treatment of pain and some principles of paced pain management. The focus is on dispelling myths (such as the need for MRI scanning, surgery etc.) and enabling sufferers to make improved decisions about their care.

Data from over 120 patient attendances will be presented. These indicate high acceptability and satisfaction with 92% rating the afternoon as good or excellent and only 11% claiming the session had not helped them make better decisions about future treatment.

This model is simple, relatively low cost and accessible to primary care, which is acceptable and seemingly helpful to sufferers. It appears to be a viable model for presenting information to back pain sufferers early in their illness. The aim of this is to help them make more informed decisions and to see the need to incorporate self management approaches early in their history. More data are needed to ascertain whether these are achievable goals.