The effects of common medical interventions on pain, back function, and work resumption in patients with chronic low back pain - A prospective 2-year cohort study in six countries

被引:82
作者
Hansson, TH [1 ]
Hansson, EK [1 ]
机构
[1] Sahlgrens Univ Hosp, Dept Orthopaed, SE-41345 Gothenburg, Sweden
关键词
disability; function; low back pain; pain; surgery; treatment;
D O I
10.1097/00007632-200012010-00013
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Study Design. A prospective cohort study with identical questionnaires and inclusion criteria was performed. Objectives. To compare in six different countries the frequencies and effects of the common medical interventions used for patients with low back pain who are work incapacitated. Summary of Background Data. Low back pain is a huge problem with increasing costs for health care, industry, and society. Methods. Cohorts of employed men and women ages 18 to 59 years who had been sick-listed (100%) for a minimum of 90 days because of low back pain were recruited in Denmark, Germany, Israel, Sweden, the Netherlands, and the United States. The subjects received three separate questionnaires with identical questions after 90 days, 1 year, and 2 years. The questionnaires included separate questions about background factors, treatment, and the like, as well as validated scales such as the Hannover Activities of Daily Living, von Korff pain score, Short Form-36, and Karasek-Theorell. Working status was obtained from registers. Main outcome measures were working/not working, back function, and pain. Results. All three questionnaires were completed by 2080 subjects in the six countries. With few exceptions, there were great similarities in the appointments, examinations, and treatments in the different countries. Considerable differences were found between the back surgery rates, which ranged from 6% in Sweden to 32% in the United States during the first 90 days of the study. Very few of the interventions had any noticeable positive effects on work resumption, pain, or back function. Back surgery in Sweden was a striking exception, positively affecting all three outcome measures. The frequencies of work resumption within the first year ranged from 73% in the Netherlands to 32% in Denmark. Conclusions. Almost none of the commonly occurring and frequently practiced medical interventions for patients who are sick-listed because of low back pain had any positive effects on either the recorded health measures or work resumption.
引用
收藏
页码:3055 / 3064
页数:10
相关论文
共 63 条
[11]   INDEPENDENT EVALUATION OF A MULTIDISCIPLINARY REHABILITATION PROGRAM FOR CHRONIC LOW-BACK PAIN [J].
CASSISI, JE ;
SYPERT, GW ;
SALAMON, A ;
KAPEL, L .
NEUROSURGERY, 1989, 25 (06) :877-883
[12]   COMPREHENSIVE MULTIDISCIPLINARY TREATMENT OF CHRONIC PAIN - A FOLLOW-UP-STUDY OF TREATED AND NON-TREATED GROUPS [J].
DEARDORFF, WW ;
RUBIN, HS ;
SCOTT, DW .
PAIN, 1991, 45 (01) :35-43
[13]   HOW MANY DAYS OF BED REST FOR ACUTE LOW-BACK-PAIN - A RANDOMIZED CLINICAL-TRIAL [J].
DEYO, RA ;
DIEHL, AK ;
ROSENTHAL, M .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1986, 315 (17) :1064-1070
[14]   A CONTROLLED TRIAL OF TRANSCUTANEOUS ELECTRICAL NERVE-STIMULATION (TENS) AND EXERCISE FOR CHRONIC LOW-BACK-PAIN [J].
DEYO, RA ;
WALSH, NE ;
MARTIN, DC ;
SCHOENFELD, LS ;
RAMAMURTHY, S .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1990, 322 (23) :1627-1634
[15]   EFFECTS OF SPINAL FLEXION AND EXTENSION EXERCISES ON LOW-BACK-PAIN AND SPINAL MOBILITY IN CHRONIC MECHANICAL LOW-BACK-PAIN PATIENTS [J].
ELNAGGAR, IM ;
NORDIN, M ;
SHEIKHZADEH, A ;
PARNIANPOUR, M ;
KAHANOVITZ, N .
SPINE, 1991, 16 (08) :967-972
[16]  
ESTLANDER AM, 1991, SCAND J REHABIL MED, V23, P97
[17]  
EVANS C, 1987, Physiotherapy Canada, V39, P96
[18]   A RANDOMIZED TRIAL OF EXERCISE THERAPY IN PATIENTS WITH ACUTE LOW-BACK-PAIN - EFFICACY ON SICKNESS ABSENCE [J].
FAAS, A ;
VANEIJK, JTM ;
CHAVANNES, AW ;
GUBBELS, JW .
SPINE, 1995, 20 (08) :941-947
[19]   Management of nonspecific low back pain by physiotherapists in Britain and Ireland - A descriptive questionnaire of current clinical practice [J].
Foster, NE ;
Thompson, KA ;
Baxter, GD ;
Allen, JM .
SPINE, 1999, 24 (13) :1332-1342
[20]   Disability resulting from occupational low back pain .2. What do we know about secondary prevention? A review of the scientific evidence on prevention after disability begins [J].
Frank, JW ;
Brooker, AS ;
DeMaio, SE ;
Kerr, MS ;
Maetzel, A ;
Shannon, HS ;
Sullivan, TJ ;
Norman, RW ;
Wells, RP .
SPINE, 1996, 21 (24) :2918-2929