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Journal ArticleDOI

Acute back pain: a control-group comparison of behavioral vs traditional management methods.

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TLDR
Back-pain patients with onset in the preceding 1–10 days and comparable on a back examination were randomly assigned to traditional management and behavioral treatment methods and patients were compared at 6 weeks and 9–12 months on a set of “Sick/Well” scores.
Abstract
Back-pain patients with onset in the preceding 1-10 days and comparable on a back examination were randomly assigned to traditional management (A regimen) and behavioral treatment methods (B regimen). Patients were compared at 6 weeks and 9-12 months on a set of "Sick/Well" scores derived from patient reported vocational status (V), health-care utilization (HCU), claimed impairment (CI), and pain drawings (D) and on two measures of activity level. No differences were found at 6 weeks, but at 9-12 months, A-group S's were more "sick." No A/B differences were found on activity-level measures. Group A S's showed significant increases in claimed impairment from preonset to follow-up, whereas Group B S's had returned at follow-up to preonset levels.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fear-avoidance and its consequences in chronic musculoskeletal pain: a state of the art

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed the existing evidence for the mediating role of pain-related fear, and its immediate and long-term consequences in the initiation and maintenance of chronic pain disability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conservative treatment of acute and chronic nonspecific low back pain. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of the most common interventions.

TL;DR: The quality of the design, execution, and reporting of randomized controlled trials should be improved, to establish strong evidence for the effectiveness of the various therapeutic interventions for acute and chronic low back pain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acute low back pain: systematic review of its prognosis.

TL;DR: People with acute low back pain and associated disability usually improve rapidly within weeks, pain and disability are typically ongoing, and recurrences are common.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coping with chronic pain: A critical review of the literature.

TL;DR: The empirical research which has examined the relationships among beliefs, coping, and adjustment to chronic pain is reviewed and recommendations for future research include the development of coping and belief measures which do not confound different dimensions in the same measure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Occupational health guidelines for the management of low back pain at work: evidence review.

TL;DR: There is increasing demand for evidence-based health care, and back pain is one of the most common and difficult occupational health problems, but there has been no readily available evidence base or guidance on management.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Pain Drawing as an Aid to the Psychologic Evaluation of Patients With Low-Back Pain

A O Ransford, +2 more
- 01 Jun 1976 - 
TL;DR: The pain drawing of a patient with low-back pain predicted a high or low hypochondriasis or hysteria scale on the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory in 97 of 109 patients studied.
Journal Article

The disuse syndrome.

TL;DR: The identifying characteristics of the disuse syndrome are cardiovascular vulnerability, obesity, musculoskeletal fragility, depression and premature aging.
Journal ArticleDOI

Psychological interventions for chronic pain: a critical review. II Operant conditioning, hypnosis, and cognitive-behavioral therapy

TL;DR: It is concluded that there is no evidence that biofeedback is superior to relaxation training with these headache populations, and studies to date evaluating the effectiveness of relaxation training and alpha, electromyographic, finger temperature, and other types ofBiofeedback led to this conclusion.
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