University of Limerick
Browse
OSullivan_2015_cognitive.pdf (1.04 MB)

Cognitive functional therapy for disabling non-specific chronic low back pain: a multiple case cohort study

Download (1.04 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2016-11-16, 15:56 authored by Kieran O'Sullivan, Wim Dankaerts, Leonard O'SullivanLeonard O'Sullivan, Peter B. O'Sullivan
Background. Multiple dimensions across the biopsychosocial spectrum are relevant in the management of nonspecific chronic low back pain (NSCLBP). Cognitive functional therapy is a behaviorally targeted intervention that combines normalization of movement and abolition of pain behaviors with cognitive reconceptualization of the NSCLBP problem while targeting psychosocial and lifestyle barriers to recovery. Objective. The purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness of cognitive functional therapy for people with disabling NSCLBP who were awaiting an aDesign. A multiple case-cohort study (n 26) consisting of 3 phases (A1–B–A2) was conducted.ppointment with a specialist medical consultant. Methods. Measurement phase A1 was a baseline phase during which measurements of pain and functional disability were collected on 3 occasions over 3 months for all participants. During phase B, participants entered a cognitive functional therapy intervention program involving approximately 8 treatments over an average of 12 weeks. Finally, phase A2 was a 12-month, no-treatment follow-up period. Outcomes were analyzed using repeated-measures analysis of variance or Friedman test (with post hoc Bonferroni correction) across 7 time intervals, depending on normality of data distribution. Results. Statistically significant reductions in both functional disability and pain were observed immediately postintervention and were maintained over the 12-month follow-up period. These reductions reached clinical significance for both disability and pain. Secondary psychosocial outcomes, including depression, anxiety, back beliefs, fear of physical activity, catastrophizing, and self-efficacy, were significantly improved after the intervention. Limitations. The study was not a randomized controlled trial. Although primary oConclusions. These promising results suggest that cognitive functional therapy should be compared with other conservative interventions for the management of disabling NSCLBP in secondary care settings in large randomized clinical trials.

Funding

Development of a structure identification methodology for nonlinear dynamic systems

National Research Foundation

Find out more...

History

Publication

Physical Therapy;95, (11), pp. 1478-1488

Publisher

American Physical Therapy Association

Note

peer-reviewed

Other Funding information

HRB

Rights

Copyright © 2015 American Physical Therapy Association

Language

English

Usage metrics

    University of Limerick

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC