Beliefs of Australian physical therapists related to lumbopelvic pain following a biopsychosocial workshop

Introduction. The purpose of this study was to determine if participation in a 1-day workshop focusing on the biopsychosocial nature of lumbopelvic pain disorders would influence the beliefs of physical therapists in Australia. Review of the Literature. Within the biopsychosocial model of pain disor...

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Main Authors: Beales, Darren, O'Sullivan, Peter
Format: Journal Article
Published: Education Section, American Physical Therapy Association 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42440
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author Beales, Darren
O'Sullivan, Peter
author_facet Beales, Darren
O'Sullivan, Peter
author_sort Beales, Darren
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Introduction. The purpose of this study was to determine if participation in a 1-day workshop focusing on the biopsychosocial nature of lumbopelvic pain disorders would influence the beliefs of physical therapists in Australia. Review of the Literature. Within the biopsychosocial model of pain disorders,there is growing understanding of the role of beliefs as a potential contributor to disability.Not only is there an interest in the beliefs of those afflicted with pain disorders, but also in the beliefs of the health care practitioner (HCP). HCP beliefs have the potential to influence management and client beliefs in both positive and negative ways.Subjects. Physical therapists who voluntarily attended a 1-day professional development workshop in Australia (n = 77).Methods. Physical therapist beliefs related to back pain (modified Back Beliefs Questionnaire) and pelvic girdle pain (customized questions) were assessed pre- and post-workshop. The title of the workshop was “A contemporary biopsychosocial approach to pelvic girdle pain.” The content included presentation of contemporary scientific evidence, case study examples, and live patient demonstrations.Results. Beliefs related to lumbopelvic pain demonstrated a positive shift following the participation in the workshop (ANOVA P = .03). For pelvic girdle pain, there was a shift in beliefs related to thecauses that is more aligned with current literature in this area (ANOVA P < .01).Discussion and Conclusion. A 1-day professional development workshop resulted in more positive beliefs related to lumbopelvic pain in Australian physical therapists. Further research is required toidentify key education strategies to change beliefs that have a positive flow on effect to altering HCP behaviors.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-424402017-03-08T13:31:48Z Beliefs of Australian physical therapists related to lumbopelvic pain following a biopsychosocial workshop Beales, Darren O'Sullivan, Peter Lumbopelvic pain Professional development Physical therapy Pelvic girdle pain Beliefs Back pain Introduction. The purpose of this study was to determine if participation in a 1-day workshop focusing on the biopsychosocial nature of lumbopelvic pain disorders would influence the beliefs of physical therapists in Australia. Review of the Literature. Within the biopsychosocial model of pain disorders,there is growing understanding of the role of beliefs as a potential contributor to disability.Not only is there an interest in the beliefs of those afflicted with pain disorders, but also in the beliefs of the health care practitioner (HCP). HCP beliefs have the potential to influence management and client beliefs in both positive and negative ways.Subjects. Physical therapists who voluntarily attended a 1-day professional development workshop in Australia (n = 77).Methods. Physical therapist beliefs related to back pain (modified Back Beliefs Questionnaire) and pelvic girdle pain (customized questions) were assessed pre- and post-workshop. The title of the workshop was “A contemporary biopsychosocial approach to pelvic girdle pain.” The content included presentation of contemporary scientific evidence, case study examples, and live patient demonstrations.Results. Beliefs related to lumbopelvic pain demonstrated a positive shift following the participation in the workshop (ANOVA P = .03). For pelvic girdle pain, there was a shift in beliefs related to thecauses that is more aligned with current literature in this area (ANOVA P < .01).Discussion and Conclusion. A 1-day professional development workshop resulted in more positive beliefs related to lumbopelvic pain in Australian physical therapists. Further research is required toidentify key education strategies to change beliefs that have a positive flow on effect to altering HCP behaviors. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42440 Education Section, American Physical Therapy Association restricted
spellingShingle Lumbopelvic pain
Professional development
Physical therapy
Pelvic girdle pain
Beliefs
Back pain
Beales, Darren
O'Sullivan, Peter
Beliefs of Australian physical therapists related to lumbopelvic pain following a biopsychosocial workshop
title Beliefs of Australian physical therapists related to lumbopelvic pain following a biopsychosocial workshop
title_full Beliefs of Australian physical therapists related to lumbopelvic pain following a biopsychosocial workshop
title_fullStr Beliefs of Australian physical therapists related to lumbopelvic pain following a biopsychosocial workshop
title_full_unstemmed Beliefs of Australian physical therapists related to lumbopelvic pain following a biopsychosocial workshop
title_short Beliefs of Australian physical therapists related to lumbopelvic pain following a biopsychosocial workshop
title_sort beliefs of australian physical therapists related to lumbopelvic pain following a biopsychosocial workshop
topic Lumbopelvic pain
Professional development
Physical therapy
Pelvic girdle pain
Beliefs
Back pain
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42440