Abstract

BackgroundImaging is overused in the management of low back pain (LBP). Interventions designed to decrease non-indicated imaging have predominantly targeted practitioner education alone; however, these are typically ineffective. Barriers to reducing imaging have been identified for both patients and practitioners. Interventions aimed at addressing barriers in both these groups concurrently may be more effective. The Behaviour Change Wheel provides a structured framework for developing implementation interventions to facilitate behavioural change. The aim of this study was to develop an implementation intervention aiming to reduce non-indicated imaging for LBP, by targeting both general medical practitioner (GP) and patient barriers concurrently.MethodsThe Behaviour Change Wheel was used to identify the behaviours requiring change, and guide initial development of an implementation intervention. Preliminary testing of the intervention was performed with: 1) content review by experts in the field; and 2) qualitative analysis of semi-structured interviews with 10 GPs and 10 healthcare consumers, to determine barriers and facilitators to successful implementation of the intervention in clinical practice. Results informed further development of the implementation intervention.ResultsPatient pressure on the GP to order imaging, and the inability of the GP to manage a clinical consult for LBP without imaging, were determined to be the primary behaviours leading to referral for non-indicated imaging. The developed implementation intervention consisted of a purpose-developed clinical resource for GPs to use with patients during a LBP consult, and a GP training session. The implementation intervention was designed to provide GP and patient education, remind GPs of preferred behaviour, provide clinical decision support, and facilitate GP-patient communication. Preliminary testing found experts, GPs, and healthcare consumers were supportive of most aspects of the developed resource, and thought use would likely decrease non-indicated imaging for LBP. Suggestions for improvement of the implementation intervention were incorporated into a final version.ConclusionsThe developed implementation intervention, aiming to reduce non-indicated imaging for LBP, was informed by behaviour change theory and preliminary testing. Further testing is required to assess feasibility of use in clinical practice, and the effectiveness of the implementation intervention in reducing imaging for LBP, before large-scale implementation can be considered.

Highlights

  • Imaging is overused in the management of low back pain (LBP)

  • Stage 1: Development of a draft implementation intervention using the behaviour change wheel Step 1: Understanding the behaviour The behavioural problem to be addressed was defined by the authors as: general medical practitioner (GP) referring for non-indicated imaging in patients presenting with LBP

  • Instead the focus was on any presentation of non-specific LBP where imaging was not indicated

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Summary

Introduction

Imaging is overused in the management of low back pain (LBP). Interventions designed to decrease non-indicated imaging have predominantly targeted practitioner education alone; these are typically ineffective. The aim of this study was to develop an implementation intervention aiming to reduce non-indicated imaging for LBP, by targeting both general medical practitioner (GP) and patient barriers concurrently. Low back pain (LBP) is a common problem, with a mean one-year prevalence of 38.1% [1] It is one of the leading causes of global disability [2] and care seeking [3], and is associated with high direct (medical) and indirect (non-medical) costs [4], resulting in large economic and social burden. Imaging is only indicated in cases of suspected serious pathology (e.g. cancer or infection), or cases of specific pathology (e.g. spinal stenosis) where surgery is being considered [4] These are estimated to account for less than 10% of all LBP presentations [3, 4]. Clinical practice guidelines recommend imaging only in certain cases of LBP, poor adherence to these guidelines is seen in clinical practice [4, 6, 7]

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