Biopsychosocial factors are associated with low back pain in female nursing students: a cross sectional study.

Background: Occupational low back pain is a significant problem among nurses. Recent literature suggests current occupational preventative strategies for nurses have not been effective. Given low back pain is already prevalent before commencing employment,nursing students should be the target of pre...

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Main Authors: Mitchell, Tim, O'Sullivan, Peter, Burnett, Angus, Straker, Leon, Smith, Anne, Thornton, Jennifer, Rudd, C.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier Science 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/18113
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author Mitchell, Tim
O'Sullivan, Peter
Burnett, Angus
Straker, Leon
Smith, Anne
Thornton, Jennifer
Rudd, C.
author_facet Mitchell, Tim
O'Sullivan, Peter
Burnett, Angus
Straker, Leon
Smith, Anne
Thornton, Jennifer
Rudd, C.
author_sort Mitchell, Tim
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: Occupational low back pain is a significant problem among nurses. Recent literature suggests current occupational preventative strategies for nurses have not been effective. Given low back pain is already prevalent before commencing employment,nursing students should be the target of preventative interventions. Modifiable personal factors which contribute to low back pain have proven difficult to identify, but are thought to play an important role in the biopsychosocial nature of low back pain.Objectives: To evaluate the contribution of personal biopsychosocial factors to low backpain in nursing students.Design: Cross-sectional study comprising physical testing and questionnaires.Settings: Two university undergraduate nursing schools in Western Australia. Participants: 170 female undergraduate nursing students.Methods: Low back pain and control subjects were compared across social, lifestyle (physical activity), psychological (stress, anxiety, depression, back pain beliefs, coping strategies and catastrophising) and physical (spinal postures and spinal kinematics in functional tasks, leg and back muscle endurance, spinal repositioning error and cardiovascular fitness) characteristics. Low back pain was considered as either "minor" or "significant" depending upon pain severity, duration, impact and level of disability.Results: Over 30% of all subjects (mean age 22.5 4.5 years) reported 'significant" low backpain in the preceding 12 months.Univariate analysis: social measures did not distinguish between groups. Subjects with "significant" low back pain were more physically active (p = 0.04), hadhigher stress scores (p = 0.01) and used passive coping strategies (p < 0.001) more than othersubjects. "Significant" lowback pain subjects held their lower lumbar spine in a more extended posture during transfers at bed height than other subjects. No differences between groups were found for sagittal spinal mobility, static spinal posture, muscle endurance, spinal repositioning error, cardiovascular fitness or other psychological measures. Multivariate analysis: regressionanalysis revealed stress, coping, physical activity, spinal kinematics, and age all contributed independently to the presence of low back pain, representing a significant 23% of variance.Conclusions: Modifiable lifestyle, psychological and physical factors were independently associated with low back pain in nursing students. Targeting personal factors associated with low back pain in nursing students, rather than occupational factors in working nurses may help improve the impact of low back pain in nurses. Prospective studies are requiredto confirm the relevance of these findings for risk of future low back pain in nurses.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2009
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-181132017-09-13T16:05:29Z Biopsychosocial factors are associated with low back pain in female nursing students: a cross sectional study. Mitchell, Tim O'Sullivan, Peter Burnett, Angus Straker, Leon Smith, Anne Thornton, Jennifer Rudd, C. - Physical - Psychological - Biopsychosocial Low back pain - Nurse Background: Occupational low back pain is a significant problem among nurses. Recent literature suggests current occupational preventative strategies for nurses have not been effective. Given low back pain is already prevalent before commencing employment,nursing students should be the target of preventative interventions. Modifiable personal factors which contribute to low back pain have proven difficult to identify, but are thought to play an important role in the biopsychosocial nature of low back pain.Objectives: To evaluate the contribution of personal biopsychosocial factors to low backpain in nursing students.Design: Cross-sectional study comprising physical testing and questionnaires.Settings: Two university undergraduate nursing schools in Western Australia. Participants: 170 female undergraduate nursing students.Methods: Low back pain and control subjects were compared across social, lifestyle (physical activity), psychological (stress, anxiety, depression, back pain beliefs, coping strategies and catastrophising) and physical (spinal postures and spinal kinematics in functional tasks, leg and back muscle endurance, spinal repositioning error and cardiovascular fitness) characteristics. Low back pain was considered as either "minor" or "significant" depending upon pain severity, duration, impact and level of disability.Results: Over 30% of all subjects (mean age 22.5 4.5 years) reported 'significant" low backpain in the preceding 12 months.Univariate analysis: social measures did not distinguish between groups. Subjects with "significant" low back pain were more physically active (p = 0.04), hadhigher stress scores (p = 0.01) and used passive coping strategies (p < 0.001) more than othersubjects. "Significant" lowback pain subjects held their lower lumbar spine in a more extended posture during transfers at bed height than other subjects. No differences between groups were found for sagittal spinal mobility, static spinal posture, muscle endurance, spinal repositioning error, cardiovascular fitness or other psychological measures. Multivariate analysis: regressionanalysis revealed stress, coping, physical activity, spinal kinematics, and age all contributed independently to the presence of low back pain, representing a significant 23% of variance.Conclusions: Modifiable lifestyle, psychological and physical factors were independently associated with low back pain in nursing students. Targeting personal factors associated with low back pain in nursing students, rather than occupational factors in working nurses may help improve the impact of low back pain in nurses. Prospective studies are requiredto confirm the relevance of these findings for risk of future low back pain in nurses. 2009 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/18113 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2008.11.004 Elsevier Science restricted
spellingShingle - Physical
- Psychological
- Biopsychosocial
Low back pain
- Nurse
Mitchell, Tim
O'Sullivan, Peter
Burnett, Angus
Straker, Leon
Smith, Anne
Thornton, Jennifer
Rudd, C.
Biopsychosocial factors are associated with low back pain in female nursing students: a cross sectional study.
title Biopsychosocial factors are associated with low back pain in female nursing students: a cross sectional study.
title_full Biopsychosocial factors are associated with low back pain in female nursing students: a cross sectional study.
title_fullStr Biopsychosocial factors are associated with low back pain in female nursing students: a cross sectional study.
title_full_unstemmed Biopsychosocial factors are associated with low back pain in female nursing students: a cross sectional study.
title_short Biopsychosocial factors are associated with low back pain in female nursing students: a cross sectional study.
title_sort biopsychosocial factors are associated with low back pain in female nursing students: a cross sectional study.
topic - Physical
- Psychological
- Biopsychosocial
Low back pain
- Nurse
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/18113