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Interdisciplinary Intervention Versus Brief Intervention for Patients With Musculoskeletal Pain

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Musculoskeletal Diseases
Interventions
Behavioral: Control Group, Brief Intervention
Behavioral: Interdisciplinary intervention
Registration Number
NCT01346423
Lead Sponsor
Sykehuset Innlandet HF
Brief Summary

Musculoskeletal pain is very common in the normal population, and the reason for about 50 % of the long term sickness absence in Norway. Most of these patients have common, but troublesome subjective health complaints where pathological findings are absent or substantially less than expected compared to the reported intensity of the complaints. Psychosocial factors are important in the development of chronic complaints. In a large meta-analysis job satisfaction was found to be associated with mental health and subjective physical health. Individual factors are also important. Uncertainty related to the understanding of pain mechanisms, treatment strategies and management contribute to the problem.

Among patients sicklisted for musculoskeletal complaints, low back pain is the largest diagnose group. Most of these patients also have many other complaints. Previous studies have shown that for low back pain patients a brief intervention at a spine clinic with examination, information, reassurance, and encouragement to engage in physical activity as normal as possible, had significant effect in reducing sick leave. Other studies have shown that multidisciplinary rehabilitation for chronic low back pain has effect on sick leave. A Danish study from Arbeidsmiljøinstituttet report that interdisciplinary treatment for patients sicklisted for musculoskeletal complaints, had effect on socio-economic costs, pain, and function.

A treatment team consisting of various professionals is expensive, and in this study we will compare the simple, standardized brief intervention model with the more resource demanding interdisciplinary treatment for patients sicklisted for musculoskeletal complaints.

Research question / hypothesis: An interdisciplinary treatment model for musculoskeletal complaints - is it beneficial for reducing sickness absence?

Detailed Description

In 2007 The Government in Norway raised a fund to support efforts to reduce sickness absence, called "Raskere tilbake prosjekt". Helse Sør-Øst was invited to establish projects within their health care system, and the department of physical medicine and rehabilitation at Sykehuset Innlandet HF was assigned the task to constitute an outpatient-clinic for musculoskeletal diseases.

This initiative opened possibilities to explore new strategies based on science and own clinical experience to help these patients back to work without being confined to the traditional diagnose related examination and treatment offered in most clinics. In this project the main focus is directed towards work and barriers for working life. Because sickness absence often is multicausal and needs a bio-psycho-social approach, this should be reflected in the composition of the treatment team.

There is a great demand to make out how complex bio-psycho-social problems can be solved, organized, implemented, and have economic gains for the society. To answer these questions we need randomized controlled clinical studies, and we need documentation when new treatment models are offered to this group of patients.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
284
Inclusion Criteria
  • Musculoskeletal diagnosis
  • Minimum 50% sick leave from work for not more than one year
  • Minimum 50 % employed
Exclusion Criteria
  • Not sicklisted
  • Sicklisted less than 50%
  • Sicklisted > 1 year
  • Less than 50% employed
  • Pregnancy
  • Does not speak Norwegian
  • Psychiatric disease
  • Osteoporosis
  • Cancer disease
  • Rheumatic disease
  • Ongoing Insurance Compensation Case

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Controll groupControl Group, Brief InterventionThe brief intervention is a standardized intervention based on the studies by Indahl and Hagen. Therapist treatment manuals will be written for the intervention. The essential features are interview and examination by a specialist in physical medicine and rehabilitation. Patients will be given time to express their concerns and problems in daily activities. Unless symptoms and clinical findings indicate some serious disease, the patients will be informed about the good prognosis, and the importance of staying active to avoid development of muscle dysfunction.
Intervention groupInterdisciplinary interventionTreatment team with a physician, a physiotherapist, a social service worker. The main goal for the team is to make a survey of the patient's situation, in which the biomedical tradition to make a diagnosis is replaced by a disability diagnosis, with systematically identification of barriers for return to work. The patient meets at the outpatient clinic three times; at baseline, after 2 weeks and after 3 months. One year after baseline the patient has a telephone-follow-up. At baseline, the patient and the team works out a rehabilitation plan and in this process a new visual, educational tool is central.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in Sickness leave 1 year after inclusionAt 12 months after baseline

In addition to the main outcome we will also evaluate job satisfaction, social support, coping, defense mechanisms, illness perception, function level, activity of daily living, psychological distress, and health complaints/pain as recorded by the questionnaires at baseline.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Dep. of Physica. Medicin and Rehabilitation, Innlandet Hospital Trust

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Ottestad, Norway

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