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Cervical Spine Health of Surgeons

University of British Columbia logo

University of British Columbia

Status

Withdrawn

Conditions

Occupational Health Physicians
Neck Pain

Treatments

Procedure: Neck strengthening exercise program

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01932307
H13-01151

Details and patient eligibility

About

There are currently no standardized programs addressing the well-documented neck pain in surgeons as a result of non-ergonomic positioning and the use of microsurgical equipment. The primary goal of this study is to introduce a brief neck strengthening exercise program to optimize surgeons' neck health. Instructional videos outlining the program along with surveys designed to assess attitude towards neck health will be distributed to first year general surgery residents at the University of British Columbia (UBC) through their required online curriculum webpage. A followup survey will be administered 10 weeks later to determine efficacy of the program through self-reported adherence and changes in attitude towards neck health.

Full description

  1. Purpose:

    To evaluate the efficacy of a pre-operative 2-minute exercise program in reducing surgical residents self-reported neck pain.

  2. Hypothesis:

    A 10 week 2-minute neck strengthening exercise program completed between cases will reduce self-reported chronic neck pain caused by the use of surgical instruments and increase musculoskeletal health awareness in a group of residents.

  3. Justification:

    Surgical residents will be asked to complete a baseline survey regarding their self-rated neck pain. Then they will be introduced to a 2-minute neck strengthening exercise to be performed in between surgical cases. They will be asked to evaluate their neck pain again 10 weeks later.

    Neck pain experience before and after the introduction of neck exercises will be compared.

  4. Objectives:

    1. Define the problem through prevalence data in a sample of surgeons.
    2. Understand qualitatively and quantitatively measures of pain and quality on residents.
    3. Evaluate the efficacy of a pre-operative 2-minute exercise program.
    4. Disseminate our results and change the cultural norms of practice.
  5. Research Method:

    All first year general surgery residents at the University of British Columbia will be invited to participate. They will be asked to complete a survey regarding neck pain experience and introduced to a 2-minute neck muscle exercise video which they will be advised to follow for the next 10 weeks. Another follow-up survey will be sent at the end of 10 weeks.

  6. Statistical analysis:

Percentage of residents showing >50% improvement using an alpha of 0.05 statistical significance will be the primary outcome measure using the appropriate validated pain questionnaire. The attitude of the residents towards their neck health before the intervention will be compared to their attitudes at the completion of the study using a Pearson's chi squared test as a measure of significant difference. The self-reported effectiveness and adherence of the program at the completion of the study will be used as a measure of efficacy. All statistical analysis will be conducted in SAS 9.3.

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • All first year general surgery residents at the University of British Columbia

Exclusion criteria

  • Previous serious neck injury (e.g. herniated disc)
  • Chest pain during physical exercise
  • Heart failure
  • Spinal Stenosis
  • Radicular nerve pain
  • Neurological condition causing chronic pain
  • Currently involved directly with the study group

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

0 participants in 1 patient group

PGY1 General Surgery Residents
Experimental group
Description:
All first year general surgery residents at the University of British Columbia
Treatment:
Procedure: Neck strengthening exercise program

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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