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The Effect of Pain Education on Chiropractic Students' Understanding of Chronic Pain

T

Teesside University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Education
Pain, Chronic

Treatments

Other: Pain neuroscience education
Other: Red Flag Education

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05359900
TeessideUniversity22

Details and patient eligibility

About

Chronic pain is the leading cause of disability worldwide affecting just under 28 million people in the UK. Chronic pain conditions require a biopsychosocial rather than a biomedical model of care. Biomedical management lacks evidence of effectiveness but also has the potential to exacerbate the condition by raising fears and anxiety about potential pathological abnormalities.

Thus, the pre-registration phase is an important point where an individual's understanding of, and beliefs about, pain and people with pain may be shaped for the future. The need for improved and better education of healthcare professionals to support best practice for low back pain with the aim of integrating professionals' management of low back pain and fostering innovation in practice is well recognised. Pain education research with pre-registration chiropractors is lacking.

Therefore, this study aims to:

To compare the effect of two pain education intervention, through a multi-site randomised control trial, on the following three questionnaire based outcome measures:

  1. Knowledge (understanding) of chronic pain
  2. Attitudes towards chronic pain patients
  3. Pain management behaviours

Full description

In 2011 Briggs et al described pain education at undergraduate level for healthcare professionals as 'woefully inadequate'. Pain Neurophysiology Education (PNE) can improve undergraduates' pain understanding/management, however previous RCTs used single discipline groups and immediate follow-up. Investigation of the effectiveness of this education on students across the multi-professional team with medium-to-long-term follow-up will provide important new information on the generalisability of existing data and whether or not any changes in pain understanding/management are maintained over time.

This study aims to contribute to the development of neuromusculoskeletal chiropractic education by identifying whether or not this education, which aims to up skill healthcare professionals of the future, is effective and can change their behaviours in practice to enhance patient care in chronic pain management. PNE has been shown to be useful in patient care in conjunction with other treatment methods. If this intervention is successful in altering pain attitudes and knowledge in keeping with modern science then students may feel more confident and able to manage pain post qualification. The findings of this study will support or refute the addition of PNE into healthcare professional undergraduate programmes

Enrollment

60 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Current Chiropractic students enrolled at either: Teesside University; The Welsh institute of Chiropractic - University of South Wales; The AECC University College; McTimoney College of Chiropractic; London Southbank University
  • Willing to consent to attending two educational sessions followed by completing questionnaires

Exclusion criteria

  • Chiropractic students not actively enrolled at either: Teesside University; The Welsh institute of Chiropractic - University of South Wales; The AECC University College; McTimoney College of Chiropractic; London Southbank University
  • Participants will be excluded if they have previously received in depth education on red flags and or pain neurophysiology.
  • Students not willing to consent to attending two educational sessions followed by the completion of questionnaires

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

60 participants in 2 patient groups

Pain neuroscience education
Experimental group
Description:
Pain neuroscience education group. One-off, 70 minute duration session delivered by Dr Cormac Ryan.
Treatment:
Other: Pain neuroscience education
Red flag education
Active Comparator group
Description:
Red flags education group. One-off 70 minute duration session delivered by Dr Cormac Ryan.
Treatment:
Other: Red Flag Education

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Central trial contact

Paul Chesterton, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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