Abstract

BackgroundNeck pain in adults is common and a leading cause of physical disability. Recently, a guideline was developed for the management of non-specific neck pain (NSNP) with an aim to improve the quality of the delivery of chiropractic care. One key guideline recommendation is to undertake multimodal care for patients with NSNP. The aim of this pilot study is to determine the feasibility of implementing a multifaceted knowledge translation intervention by promoting the use of multimodal care by chiropractors managing patients with NSNP.Methods/designThe design is a cluster-randomized controlled pilot and feasibility trial. Chiropractors in private practice in Canada will be approached to participate in the study. Thirty consenting chiropractors will be randomized to receive either a theory-based educational intervention in the experimental group or simply a printed copy of the guideline in the control group. Each chiropractor will recruit five neck pain patients (a total of 150 patients) into the study. Development of the multifaceted intervention was informed by the results of a related qualitative study based on the Theoretical Domains Framework and consists of a series of three webinars, two online case scenarios, a self-management video on Brief Action Planning, and a printed copy of the practice guideline. Primary feasibility outcomes for both chiropractors and patients include rates of (1) recruitment, (2) retention, and (3) adherence to the intervention. A checklist of proxy measures embedded within patient encounter forms will be used to assess chiropractors’ compliance with guideline recommendations (e.g. exercise and self-care prescriptions) at study onset and at 3 months. Secondary outcomes include scores of behavioural constructs (level of knowledge and self-efficacy) for recommended multimodal care. Clinical outcomes include pain intensity and neck pain-specific disability. Analyses from this study will focus on generating point estimates and corresponding 95 % confidence intervals for parameters of a priori interest (recruitment, retention, adherence, pain intensity, Neck Disability Index).DiscussionResults of this study will inform the design of a larger cluster-randomized controlled trial aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of the theory-based tailored intervention and increasing the use of multimodal care by chiropractors managing patients with NSNP.Trial registration https://clinicaltrials.gov/, NCT02483091Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s40814-016-0076-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Neck pain in adults is common and a leading cause of physical disability

  • We propose to determine the feasibility of evaluating a knowledge translation (KT) intervention in chiropractic clinical practice designed to improve the management of non-specific neck pain (NSNP)

  • The primary purposes of a feasibility study are to ensure that study implementation is practical and to reduce threats to the validity of a larger fully powered study [43]

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Summary

Discussion

Relevance to practice We are not aware of published studies on the successes and failures of previous attempts to implement a multifaceted KT strategy aimed at improving the management of NSNP by chiropractors The conduct of this feasibility study is expected to be compatible with existing infrastructure while permitting a certain degree of flexibility and adaptation to the needs and routines of individual community-based clinicians. Our future main study will provide insight into the effect of multimodal care on physical functioning, quality of life, and other outcomes important for patient and provider decision-making It will serve as a template for additional trials of knowledge implementation and complex evidence-based chiropractic intervention studies.

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Methods/design
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