Development of a Patient-Oriented Intervention to Support Patient-Provider Conversations about Unnecessary Lower Back Pain Imaging
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Patient-Oriented Framework
2.2. Data Collection and Analysis
2.3. Intervention
3. Results
3.1. Patient-Identified Content and Format for LBP Prescription Pad
“My doctor didn’t necessarily give me that information, so that’s super handy to have that on the prescription pad so that it’s a talking-point for the doctor to check about that stuff. So, that was super helpful.”(Participant 7)
3.2. Three Key Themes
3.2.1. The Role of Imaging in the LBP Diagnosis
“Imaging was important to see if there were any breaks or anything. I was quite athletic and in a lot of sports, so they wanted just to make sure I hadn’t injured myself.”(Participant 2)
“I went for an X-ray, where this time, I asked my doctor to give it to me because […] I wanted to see what was going on because it seemed to have gotten worse with the nerve pain down my leg.”(Participant 4)
“I thought it was just obviously necessary because I had been in a car accident and then I was having back pain. But I think the second time that I had [imaging] done, it just kept coming back and getting worse, and depending on what I was doing, I felt I should have another [imaging test] just to make sure there wasn’t something wrong. But I haven’t had another [imaging test] since then.”(Participant 7)
3.2.2. The Impact of the Patient-Physician Relationship on the LBP Diagnosis and Treatment
“We don’t let financial advisors mess with our finances, our mechanics mess with our cars, our veterinarians mess with our pets, unless we know exactly what’s going on. We have to be that vigilant with our own healthcare.”(Patient partner 1)
“Even though [patients] all have lower back pain and have been through similar journeys as far as testing, treatments, etc., the experience for those who have trusting open relationships with their physicians is much more positive.”(Patient partner 1)
“[I]t is about having conversations between physicians and patients and respecting the lived-experience voice that we bring of living with our condition and all we bring, it has to be respected. And this happens when you have great relationships […] and I know my family doctor does the same thing.”(Patient partner 2)
3.2.3. Lack of Patient Awareness of CWC
“That’s the challenge, Choosing Wisely, is to move the initiative and get it rolling so that more people know about it. That’s our challenge. There are more and more physicians practicing wisely, so it’s coming, but it’s slow. So, [patients] can be a great help. All of [us].”(Participant 6)
“If I went to the walk-in clinic, which a lot of people don’t have family doctors unfortunately, and a walk-in doctor said: we’re not going to do anything and handed this to me, I think I would feel kind of like he was writing me off.”(Participant 6)
4. Discussion
4.1. Future Research
4.2. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Level of Engagement | Description | This Study |
---|---|---|
Partner | Establish partnership with patients | We partnered with two patient partners with LBP 1. |
Engage | Engage patients in key role of planning, steering, and implementing. | The two patient partners were engaged in each step of the process, proposing the research questions, designing participant recruitment materials, data collection, analysis and interpretation of results, and refining the LBP prescription pad. |
Inform | Inform patients of benefits, harms and uncertainties about tests, treatments and other procedures. | Exploring views and perspectives of patient partners and participants, we developed a LBP prescription pad as a knowledge translation intervention about treatment options, reasons for imaging, risks of unnecessary imaging, and follow-up to manage LBP. |
Empower | Empower patients for shared decision making with healthcare providers. | The LBP prescription pad is intended to promote better patient-clinician conversations about unnecessary imaging. |
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Madani Larijani, M.; Dumba, C.; Thiessen, H.; Palen, A.; Carr, T.; Vanstone, J.R.; Fourney, D.R.; Hartness, C.; Parker, R.; Groot, G. Development of a Patient-Oriented Intervention to Support Patient-Provider Conversations about Unnecessary Lower Back Pain Imaging. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 2786. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18052786
Madani Larijani M, Dumba C, Thiessen H, Palen A, Carr T, Vanstone JR, Fourney DR, Hartness C, Parker R, Groot G. Development of a Patient-Oriented Intervention to Support Patient-Provider Conversations about Unnecessary Lower Back Pain Imaging. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(5):2786. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18052786
Chicago/Turabian StyleMadani Larijani, Maryam, Cindy Dumba, Heather Thiessen, Angie Palen, Tracey Carr, Jason R. Vanstone, Daryl R. Fourney, Collin Hartness, Robert Parker, and Gary Groot. 2021. "Development of a Patient-Oriented Intervention to Support Patient-Provider Conversations about Unnecessary Lower Back Pain Imaging" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 5: 2786. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18052786
APA StyleMadani Larijani, M., Dumba, C., Thiessen, H., Palen, A., Carr, T., Vanstone, J. R., Fourney, D. R., Hartness, C., Parker, R., & Groot, G. (2021). Development of a Patient-Oriented Intervention to Support Patient-Provider Conversations about Unnecessary Lower Back Pain Imaging. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(5), 2786. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18052786