How low back pain is managed—a mixed-methods study in 32 countries. Part 2 of low back pain in low- and middle-income countries series
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Date
Authors
Sharma, Saurab
Pathak, Anupa
Parker, Romy
Costa, Leonardo Oliveira Pena
Ghai, Babita
Igwesi-Chidobe, Chinonso
Janwantanakul, Prawit
De Jesus-Moraleida, Fabianna Resende
Chala, Mulugeta Bayisa
Pourahmadi, Mohammadreza
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Journal of Orthopaedic and Sports Physical Therapy
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Lancet Low Back Pain (LBP) Series highlighted the lack of LBP data from low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). The study aimed to describe (1) what LBP care is currently delivered in LMICs and (2) how that care is delivered.
DESIGN: An online mixed-methods study.
METHODS: A Consortium for LBP in LMICs (n = 65) was developed with an expert panel of leading LBP researchers (>2 publications on LBP) and multidisciplinary clinicians and patient partners with 5 years of clinical/lived LBP experience in LMICs. Quantitative data were analyzed using descriptive statistics. Two researchers independently analyzed qualitative data using inductive and deductive coding and developed a thematic framework.
RESULTS: Forty-seven (85%) of 55 invited panel members representing 32 LMICs completed the survey (38% women, 62% men). The panel included clinicians (34%), researchers (28%), educators (6%), and people with lived experience (4%). Pharmacotherapies and electrophysiological agents were the most used LBP treatments. The thematic framework comprised 8 themes: (1) self-management is ubiquitous, (2) medicines are the cornerstone, (3) traditional therapies have a place, (4) society plays an important role, (5) imaging use is very common, (6) reliance on passive approaches, (7) social determinants influence LBP care pathway, and (8) health systems are ill-prepared to address LBP burden.
CONCLUSION: LBP care in LMICs did not consistently align with the best available evidence. Findings will help research prioritization in LMICs and guide global LBP clinical guidelines.
Description
DATA SHARING: Data are available from the corresponding author at saurabsharma1@gmail.com upon reasonable request.
Keywords
Low back pain (LBP), Low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), SDG-03: Good health and well-being, Treatment practices
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-03:Good heatlh and well-being
Citation
Sharma, Saurab, Pathak, A., Parker, R., et al. 2024, 'How low back pain is managed—a mixed-methods study in 32 countries. Part 2 of low back pain in low- and middle-income countries series', Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy, vol. 54, no. 8, pp. 560-572, doi : 10.2519/jospt.2024.12406.