TY - JOUR
T1 - Communication skills training for practitioners to increase patient adherence to home-based rehabilitation for chronic low back pain : results of a cluster randomized controlled trial
AU - Lonsdale, Chris
AU - Hall, Amanda M.
AU - Murray, Aileen
AU - Williams, Geoffrey C.
AU - McDonough, Suzanne M.
AU - Ntoumanis, Nikos
AU - Owen, Katherine
AU - Schwarzer, Ralf
AU - Parker, Phillip
AU - Kolt, Gregory S.
AU - Hurley, Deirdre A.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Objective: To assess the effect of an intervention designed to enhance physiotherapists' communication skills on patients' adherence to recommendations regarding home-based rehabilitation for chronic low back pain. Design: Cluster randomized controlled trial. Setting: Publicly funded physiotherapy clinics. Participants: A sample (N=308) of physiotherapists (n=53) and patients with chronic low back pain (n=255; 54% female patients; mean age, 45.3y). Interventions: Patients received publicly funded individual physiotherapy care. In the control arm, care was delivered by a physiotherapist who had completed a 1-hour workshop on evidence-based chronic low back pain management. Patients in the experimental arm received care from physiotherapists who had also completed 8 hours of communication skills training. Main Outcome Measures: (1) Patient-reported adherence to their physiotherapists' recommendations regarding home-based rehabilitation measured at 1, 4, 12, and 24 weeks after the initial treatment session. (2) Pain and pain-related function measured at baseline and at 4, 12, and 24 weeks. Results: A linear mixed model analysis revealed that the experimental arm patients' ratings of adherence were higher than those of controls (overall mean difference, .41; 95% confidence interval, .10-.72; d=.28; P=.01). Moderation analyses revealed that men, regardless of the intervention, showed improvements in pain-related function over time. Only women in the experimental arm showed functional improvements; female controls showed little change in function over time. The Communication Style and Exercise Compliance in Physiotherapy intervention did not influence patients' pain, regardless of their sex. Conclusions: Communication skills training for physiotherapists had short-term positive effects on patient adherence. This training may provide a motivational basis for behavior change and could be a useful component in complex interventions to promote adherence. Communication skills training may also improve some clinical outcomes for women, but not for men.
AB - Objective: To assess the effect of an intervention designed to enhance physiotherapists' communication skills on patients' adherence to recommendations regarding home-based rehabilitation for chronic low back pain. Design: Cluster randomized controlled trial. Setting: Publicly funded physiotherapy clinics. Participants: A sample (N=308) of physiotherapists (n=53) and patients with chronic low back pain (n=255; 54% female patients; mean age, 45.3y). Interventions: Patients received publicly funded individual physiotherapy care. In the control arm, care was delivered by a physiotherapist who had completed a 1-hour workshop on evidence-based chronic low back pain management. Patients in the experimental arm received care from physiotherapists who had also completed 8 hours of communication skills training. Main Outcome Measures: (1) Patient-reported adherence to their physiotherapists' recommendations regarding home-based rehabilitation measured at 1, 4, 12, and 24 weeks after the initial treatment session. (2) Pain and pain-related function measured at baseline and at 4, 12, and 24 weeks. Results: A linear mixed model analysis revealed that the experimental arm patients' ratings of adherence were higher than those of controls (overall mean difference, .41; 95% confidence interval, .10-.72; d=.28; P=.01). Moderation analyses revealed that men, regardless of the intervention, showed improvements in pain-related function over time. Only women in the experimental arm showed functional improvements; female controls showed little change in function over time. The Communication Style and Exercise Compliance in Physiotherapy intervention did not influence patients' pain, regardless of their sex. Conclusions: Communication skills training for physiotherapists had short-term positive effects on patient adherence. This training may provide a motivational basis for behavior change and could be a useful component in complex interventions to promote adherence. Communication skills training may also improve some clinical outcomes for women, but not for men.
KW - compliance
KW - performance
KW - rehabilitation
KW - self, care_health
UR - http://handle.westernsydney.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:41204
U2 - 10.1016/j.apmr.2017.02.025
DO - 10.1016/j.apmr.2017.02.025
M3 - Article
SN - 0003-9993
VL - 98
SP - 1732
EP - 1743
JO - Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
JF - Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
IS - 9
M1 - e7
ER -