posted on 2017-12-15, 11:20authored byWannes Van Hoof, Kieran O'SullivanKieran O'Sullivan, Mary O'Keeffe, Sabine Verschueren, Peter B. O'Sullivan, Wim Dankaerts
Objectives: To investigate the efficacy of interventions for the prevention and treatment of low back pain in
nurses.
Design: Systematic review.
Data sources: The review was registered on the PROSPERO database (CRD42015026941) and followed the
PRISMA statement guidelines. A two phase approach was used. In phase one, all randomised controlled trials
included in the systematic review of Dawson et al. (2007) which reviewed interventions for low back pain in
nurses until 2004 were selected. In phase two, relevant randomised controlled trials and cluster randomised
controlled trials published from 2004 until December 2015 were identified by an electronic search of nine
databases (Embase, CINAHL, SPORTDiscus, PsycARTICLES, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, PEDro, Scopus
and MEDLINE). To be eligible, trials had to examine the efficacy of interventions either for the prevention or
treatment of low back pain in nurses. Primary outcomes of interest were any measure of pain and/or disability.
Review methods: Three reviewers independently assessed eligibility and two reviewers independently conducted
a risk of bias assessment (Cochrane Back and Neck Group).
Results: Four studies were retrieved from phase one. In phase two, 15,628 titles and abstracts were scanned.
From these, 150 full-text studies were retrieved and ten were eligible. Fourteen studies (four from phase one, ten
from phase two) were eligible for risk of bias assessment. The included trials were highly heterogeneous, differing
in pain and disability outcome measures, types of intervention, types of control group and follow-up
durations. Only four of the included studies ( n= 644 subjects) had a low risk of bias (≥6/12). Manual handling
training and stress management in isolation were not effective in nurses with and without low back pain (risk of
bias, 7/12, n =210); the addition of a stretching exercise intervention was better than only performing usual
activities (risk of bias, 6/12, n =127); combining manual handling training and back school was better than
passive physiotherapy (risk of bias, 7/12, n= 124); and a multidimensional intervention (risk of bias, 7/12,
n =183) was not superior to a general exercise program in reducing low back pain in nurses.
Conclusions: Only four relevant low risk of bias randomised controlled trials were found. At present there is no
strong evidence of efficacy for any intervention in preventing or treating low back pain in nurses. Additional
high quality randomised controlled trials are required. It may be worth exploring the efficacy of more individualised
multidimensional interventions for low back pain in the nursing population.
History
Publication
Internatonal Journal of Nursing Studies;77, pp. 222-231
Publisher
Elsevier
Note
peer-reviewed
Rights
This is the author’s version of a work that was accepted for publication in International Journal of Nursing Studies. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. A definitive version was subsequently published in International Journal of Nursing Studies, 77, pp. 222-231, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2017.10.015