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What Are the Brakes and Levers of Physical Activity Practice for Patients With Chronic Lower Back Pain?

What Are the Brakes and Levers of Physical Activity Practice for Patients With Chronic Lower Back Pain : a Qualitative Study

Status
Completed
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02466360
Enrollment
29
Registered
2015-06-09
Start date
2012-01-31
Completion date
2014-04-30
Last updated
2015-06-09

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Non-specific Chronic Lower Back Pain

Keywords

Non-specific chronic lower back pain, Physical activity, Self-exercises, Brakes, Levers, Adhesion, Self-care

Brief summary

Non-specific chronic lower back pain is a common pathology which is a real public health problem. Around 84% of the population could have non-specific chronic lower back pain at least once in their lives and 8% of that non-specific lower back pain could become chronical (pain that would last at least 3 months). This proportion of patients represents 85% of the costs related to this pathology. Physical activity practice is involved in medical care for plenty of chronical diseases and particularly for chronic lower back pain. In 2003, World Health Organization pointed out the poor adhesion of patients with chronical diseases to medical prescriptions and the after-effects it could have on illness evolution. Therefore, adhesion to physical activity practice for patients with chronic lower back pain is one of the most challenging matters for medical teams. The aim of this study was to identify the brakes and levers of physical activity practice for these patients. Sixteen individual interviews and four focus groups have been carried out on patients with chronic lower back pain who were taken care of either by a rachis functional restoration program or by primary care.

Detailed description

Non-specific chronic lower back pain is a common pathology which is a real public health problem. Around 84% of the population could have non-specific chronic lower back pain at least once in their lives and 8% of that non-specific lower back pain could become chronical (pain that would last at least 3 months). This proportion of patients represents 85% of the costs related to this pathology. Physical activity practice is involved in medical care for plenty of chronical diseases and particularly for chronic lower back pain. In 2003, World Health Organization pointed out the poor adhesion of patients with chronical diseases to medical prescriptions and the after-effects it could have on illness evolution. Therefore, adhesion to physical activity practice for patients with chronic lower back pain is one of the most challenging matters for medical teams. The aim of this study was to identify the brakes and levers of physical activity practice for these patients. Sixteen individual interviews and four focus groups have been carried out on patients with chronic lower back pain who were taken care of either by a rachis functional restoration program or by primary care.

Interventions

BEHAVIORALBack Belief questionnaire
BEHAVIORALQUEBEC scale
BEHAVIORALFocus groups

Sponsors

Université Montpellier
CollaboratorOTHER
University Hospital, Clermont-Ferrand
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Time perspective
CROSS_SECTIONAL

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Male or female who are at least 18 years old * Patients with non-specific chronic lower back pain

Exclusion criteria

* Mental or physical disabilities incompatible with focus groups/individual interviews and filling out questionnaires. * Inability to understand or speak French properly * Symptomatic lower back pain

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Individual interviewsat day 1patients with non-specific chronic lower back pain explain directly to their doctors what is preventing them from having physical activity

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
questions about their lower back pain and physical activityat day 1
Back Belief questionnaireat day 1\- Back Belief questionnaire that evaluates patients' knowledge about lower back pain
QUEBEC scaleat day 1\- QUEBEC scale that evaluates the impact of lower back pain on the daily lives of patients
Fear Avoidance Beliefs questionnaireat day 1\- Fear Avoidance Beliefs questionnaire that evaluates fears and beliefs about the disease
Visual Analog Scaleat day 1Visual Analog Scale that evaluates pain

Countries

France

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026