The back pain beliefs of health care providers: are we fear-avoidant?
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Testing the effectiveness of an innovative information package on practitioner reported behaviour and beliefs: the UK Chiropractors, Osteopaths and Musculoskeletal Physiotherapists Low back pain ManagemENT (COMPLeMENT) trial [ISRCTN77245761]The association of patient's family, leisure time, and work situation with sickness certification in primary care in SwedenThe establishment of a primary spine care practitioner and its benefits to health care reform in the United StatesDoes patient-physiotherapist agreement influence the outcome of low back pain? A prospective cohort study.Do community pharmacists have the attitudes and knowledge to support evidence based self-management of low back pain?Effect of a simple information booklet on pain persistence after an acute episode of low back pain: a non-randomized trial in a primary care setting.Staying at work with back pain: patients' experiences of work-related help received from GPs and other clinicians. A qualitative study.Low back pain patients' experiences of work modifications; a qualitative study.Managing low back pain in the primary care setting: the know-do gap.Individuals with chronic low back pain have greater difficulty in engaging in positive lifestyle behaviours than those without back pain: an assessment of health literacy.Low back pain beliefs are associated to age, location of work, education and pain-related disability in Chinese healthcare professionals working in China: a cross sectional surveyAdherence to clinical practice guidelines among three primary contact professions: a best evidence synthesis of the literature for the management of acute and subacute low back pain.Guidance on the management of pain in older people.Phenomena associated with sick leave among primary care patients with Medically Unexplained Physical Symptoms: a systematic review.The effect of the stay active advice on physical activity and on the course of acute severe low back painSwedish Council on Technology Assessment in Health Care (SBU). Chapter 11. Physicians' sick-listing practices.Healthcare provider back pain beliefs unaffected by a media campaign.How do people with chronically painful joint hypermobility syndrome make decisions about activity?Biopsychosocial factors and perceived disability in saleswomen with concurrent low back pain.Work-related outcome assessment instruments.Longitudinal validation of the fear-avoidance beliefs questionnaire (FABQ) in a Swiss-German sample of low back pain patients.Fear of (re)injury and return to work following compensable injury: qualitative insights from key stakeholders in Victoria, AustraliaHow does the self-reported clinical management of patients with low back pain relate to the attitudes and beliefs of health care practitioners? A survey of UK general practitioners and physiotherapists.A screening questionnaire to predict no return to work within 3 months for low back pain claimants.Attitudes and diagnostic practice in low back pain: A qualitative study amongst Greek and British physiotherapists.Factors impacting on doctors' management of acute low back pain: a systematic review.[Socio professional impact of surgical release of carpal tunnel syndrome]Low back pain and determinants of sickness absence.The Beliefs of Third-Level Healthcare Students towards Low-Back Pain.Fear of pain as a prognostic factor in chronic pain: conceptual models, assessment, and treatment implications.Rasch analysis resulted in an improved Norwegian version of the Pain Attitudes and Beliefs Scale (PABS).Recognizing potential barriers to setting and achieving effective rehabilitation goals for patients with persistent pain.The experience of patients with fear-avoidance belief hospitalised for low back pain - a qualitative study.Do Teaching General Practitioners' Fear-Avoidance Beliefs Influence Their Management of Patients with Low Back Pain?Manipulative therapy and clinical prediction criteria in treatment of acute nonspecific low back pain.The Pain Attitudes and Beliefs Scale for Physiotherapists: Dimensionality and Internal Consistency of the Norwegian Version.Self-efficacy beliefs predict sustained long-term sick absenteeism in individuals with chronic musculoskeletal pain.'I am afraid to make the damage worse'--fear of engaging in physical activity among patients with neck or back pain--a gender perspective.Impact of work, health and health beliefs on new episodes of pain-related and general absence-taking.Exploring beliefs and practice of opioid prescribing for persistent non-cancer pain by general practitioners.
P2860
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P2860
The back pain beliefs of health care providers: are we fear-avoidant?
description
2002 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2002年の論文
@ja
2002年学术文章
@wuu
2002年学术文章
@zh
2002年学术文章
@zh-cn
2002年学术文章
@zh-hans
2002年学术文章
@zh-my
2002年学术文章
@zh-sg
2002年學術文章
@yue
2002年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
The back pain beliefs of health care providers: are we fear-avoidant?
@en
The back pain beliefs of health care providers: are we fear-avoidant?
@nl
type
label
The back pain beliefs of health care providers: are we fear-avoidant?
@en
The back pain beliefs of health care providers: are we fear-avoidant?
@nl
prefLabel
The back pain beliefs of health care providers: are we fear-avoidant?
@en
The back pain beliefs of health care providers: are we fear-avoidant?
@nl
P356
P1476
The back pain beliefs of health care providers: are we fear-avoidant?
@en
P2093
Steven J Linton
P2888
P304
P356
10.1023/A:1020218422974
P577
2002-12-01T00:00:00Z