Improved Rehabilitation for Patients with Chronic Pain
A special issue of Journal of Clinical Medicine (ISSN 2077-0383). This special issue belongs to the section "Orthopedics".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2021) | Viewed by 118116
Special Issue Editor
Interests: assessment; biopsychosocial; chronic pain; epidemiology; interdisciplinary treatment; proteomics; rehabilitation
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Chronic pain conditions are associated with psychological distress, poor health, sick leave, and high socioeconomic costs. Years lived with disability (YLDs) is a measure of the nonfatal health outcomes and chronic pain conditions caused in 21% of all YLDs globally. A biopsychosocial approach is the foundation of modern clinical pain care and research. Successful interventions for patients with chronic pain would thus lead to important gains both for the individual and society. Pharmacological treatments are successful only for a minority of patients with persistent pain.
Rehabilitation covers a spectrum of interventions. From single interventions delivered by one professional to complex interventions over several weeks performed by a team of professionals. Rehabilitation interventions are focused on broad aspects (the whole person), implying complexities with regards to the characteristics of the rehabilitation intervention as well as of the patients included.
This Special Issue welcomes randomized controlled trials (RCT), cohort studies, and practice-based/real-world evidence/registry studies together with different types of systematic reviews. Possible areas include but are not restricted to:
- The best ways to assess patients prior to rehabilitation interventions;
- Rehabilitation interventions (including the Internet) at different levels of the health care system;
- How to optimize the content of rehabilitation in relation to the severity of the condition;
- How to optimize patient participation in rehabilitation;
- Systematic reviews, and reviews of reviews, of rehabilitation interventions;
- Methods to evaluate complex rehabilitation interventions;
- Predictions of rehabilitation outcomes;
- Mediators and moderators of outcomes in rehabilitation interventions;
- The biological and physiological effects;
- Health economics studies.
Dr. Björn Gerdle
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- assessment
- biopsychosocial
- chronic pain
- chronic persistent
- interdisciplinary treatment
- rehabilitation
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