Adherence to rehabilitation in patients with low back pain

Gregory S. Kolt, Johnson F. McEvoy

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

    134 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    This study investigated adherence to low back pain rehabilitation in the clinical setting. Adherence was assessed in 105 (71 male and 34 female) patients attending private physiotherapy clinics for rehabilitation of low back pain. Three aspects of adherence were measured over the 4-week study period: attendance at clinic-based rehabilitation sessions, adherence to a home exercise component of rehabilitation, and adherence to activities and advice during clinic-based rehabilitation. Rehabilitation outcome was measured using the Patients’ Measure of Perceived Rehabilitation (McDonald & Hardy 1990) and the Physiotherapists’ Measure of Perceived Rehabilitation (McDonald & Hardy 1990). It was found that patients attended 87.7% of their scheduled physiotherapy rehabilitation appointments and reported completing 71.6% of their prescribed home exercises. In relation to adherence to clinic-based rehabilitation activities (as measured by the Sport Injury Rehabilitation Adherence Scale, Brewer et al. 2000), patients scored an average of 11.6/15. Although no gender differences were found, compensable patients adhered significantly less to clinic-based rehabilitation activities than did their non-compensable counterparts. Further, it was found that higher levels of adherence to clinic-based activities significantly predicted both the patients’ and physiotherapists’ perception of degree of rehabilitation at the end of the 4-week rehabilitation period. These findings are discussed in relation to rehabilitation strategies for physiotherapists.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)110-116
    Number of pages6
    JournalManual Therapy
    Volume8
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2003

    Keywords

    • low back pain
    • physiotherapists
    • rehabilitation

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