2016
Physiotherapist-delivered cognitive-behavioural interventions are effective for low back pain, but can they be replicated in clinical practice? A systematic review
Hall A, Richmond H, Copsey B, Hansen Z, Williamson E, Jones G, Fordham B, Cooper Z, Lamb S. Physiotherapist-delivered cognitive-behavioural interventions are effective for low back pain, but can they be replicated in clinical practice? A systematic review. Disability And Rehabilitation 2016, 40: 1-9. PMID: 27871193, DOI: 10.1080/09638288.2016.1236155.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsLow back painHigh-quality evidenceBack painQuality of lifeCB interventionProvider trainingCognitive-behavioral interventionsPatient outcomesDifferent health care professionalsOutcomes of disabilityTrial of patientsModerate-quality evidenceAdditional trainingPhysical therapy settingHealth care professionalsExercise interventionGRADE approachIntervention reportingPsychosocial symptomsTreatment benefitLong-term effectsPainCare professionalsShort-term benefitsTreatment approaches
2015
The Effectiveness of Cognitive Behavioural Treatment for Non-Specific Low Back Pain: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Richmond H, Hall AM, Copsey B, Hansen Z, Williamson E, Hoxey-Thomas N, Cooper Z, Lamb SE. The Effectiveness of Cognitive Behavioural Treatment for Non-Specific Low Back Pain: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. PLOS ONE 2015, 10: e0134192. PMID: 26244668, PMCID: PMC4526658, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0134192.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsLow back painQuality of lifeBack painActive treatmentCognitive behavioralNon-specific low back painPersistent low back painMode of deliveryPooled effect sizeProtocol registration numberRandom-effects modelLow-cost interventionLong-term improvementPooled SMDTrial qualityCognitive-behavioral treatmentWork disabilityMethodological qualityIndependent reviewersPainRegistration numberCB interventionMeta-AnalysisSystematic reviewTrial data