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J. P. Caneiro

Researcher at Curtin University

Publications -  50
Citations -  1464

J. P. Caneiro is an academic researcher from Curtin University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Low back pain & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 41 publications receiving 872 citations. Previous affiliations of J. P. Caneiro include University of Western Australia.

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The influence of different sitting postures on head/neck posture and muscle activity

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that different sitting postures affect head/neck posture and cervico-thoracic muscle activity and the potential importance of thoraco-lumbar spine postural adjustment when training head/ neck posture is highlighted.
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Cognitive Functional Therapy: An Integrated Behavioral Approach for the Targeted Management of Disabling Low Back Pain

TL;DR: Cognitive functional therapy was developed as a flexible integrated behavioral approach for individualizing the management of disabling LBP and is underpinned by a multidimensional clinical reasoning framework in order to identify the modifiable and nonmodifiable factors associated with an individual's disabling L BP.
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Unraveling the complexity of low back pain

TL;DR: Growing evidence suggests that current practice is discordant with contemporary evidence, and is in fact often exacerbating the problem, which will demand a cultural shift in LBP beliefs and practice.
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'It's not hands-on therapy, so it's very limited': Telehealth use and views among allied health clinicians during the coronavirus pandemic.

TL;DR: Although telehealth was adopted by allied health clinicians during the coronavirus pandemic, barriers that may limit continued telehealth use among allied health Clinicians beyond the current pandemic are identified.
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Sitting postures and trunk muscle activity in adolescents with and without nonspecific chronic low back pain: an analysis based on subclassification

TL;DR: Differences in spinal kinematic and trunk muscle activity exist in both usual and slump sitting in adolescents with nonspecific chronic low back pain and healthy controls and when those with NSCLPB were subclassified and compared with controls.