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Research Papers

Patients’ and primary healthcare professionals’ perceptions regarding chronic low back pain and its management in Spain: a qualitative study

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Pages 2568-2577 | Received 26 Mar 2019, Accepted 13 Dec 2019, Published online: 22 Dec 2019
 

Abstract

Purpose

This study aimed to explore and compare the perceptions of patients and primary healthcare professionals regarding the management of chronic low back pain.

Methods

Qualitative study using 26 semi-structured individual interviews, and one discussion group, carried out in primary care in Lleida, Spain.

Results

Patients and primary healthcare professionals both had assumptions pertaining to: (1) the diagnosis and meaning of chronic low back pain, (2) expectations regarding treatment for pain reduction, and (3) communication between primary healthcare professionals and patients with chronic low back pain. Results suggest a mutual dissatisfaction with the diagnosis of chronic low back pain and a lack of understanding between primary healthcare professionals and patients. Some contradictions between them were also noted: the patients wanted quick solutions to reduce their pain, but the primary healthcare professionals required an accurate etiology to prescribe treatment, and the patients did not always follow the primary healthcare professionals’ recommendations.

Conclusions

Diagnosing and treating chronic low back pain is compromised due to differing expectations and the communication barriers that exist between healthcare professionals and their patients. Primary healthcare professionals should be aware of the power of their explanations and recommendations to patients.

    Implications for Rehabilitation

  • Primary healthcare professionals should negotiate treatments with patients and adapt them to their individual needs, according to a Patient-Centered approach and the biopsychosocial model of pain.

  • Primary healthcare professionals should explain to patients the underlying mechanisms and multifactorial nature of chronic low back pain.

  • Primary healthcare professional-patient communication needs to be improved to help patients to better understand their chronic condition.

  • The healthcare professionals in Spain should be more trained into the (bio)psychosocial model of long-term pain, stop searching for non-evident pathologies and change their biomedical beliefs.

Acknowledgements

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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