Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03710837

The Effect of Pain Education on Multidisciplinary Healthcare Students' Understanding of Chronic Pain

The Effect of Pain Education on Multidisciplinary Healthcare Students' Understanding of Chronic Pain, Clinical Recommendations and Attitudes Towards People With Chronic Pain: a Mixed-methods Randomised Controlled Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
37 (actual)
Sponsor
Teesside University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Chronic pain is the leading cause of disability worldwide affecting just under 28 million people in the UK. Chronic pain conditions require a biopsychosocial rather than a biomedical model of care. Biomedical management lacks evidence of effectiveness but also has the potential to exacerbate the condition by raising fears and anxiety about potential pathological abnormalities. Healthcare professionals often hold negative beliefs about people with chronic pain and view the condition within a biomedical framework. These negative attitudes can be observed at the pre-registration training stage of the health professionals' career. Thus, the pre-registration phase is an important point where an individual's understanding of, and beliefs about, pain and people with pain may be shaped for the future. The need for improved and better education of healthcare professionals to support best practice for low back pain with the aim of integrating professionals' management of low back pain and fostering innovation in practice is well recognised. This study seeks to quantify the benefits of pain education in knowledge, attitudes and beliefs. The findings may encourage other pre-registration institutions to deliver pain education in a more directed way and simultaneously support the International Association for the Study of Pain's (IASP) proposed integration pain education into existing curriculum.

Detailed description

In 2011 Briggs et al described pain education at undergraduate level for healthcare professionals as 'woefully inadequate'. Pain Neurophysiology Education (PNE) can improve undergraduates' pain understanding/management, however previous RCTs used single discipline groups and immediate follow-up. Investigation of the effectiveness of this education on students across the multi-professional team with medium-to-long-term follow-up will provide important new information on the generalisability of existing data and whether or not any changes in pain understanding/management are maintained over time. This study aims to contribute to the development of neuromusculoskeletal physiotherapy by identifying whether or not this education, which aims to up skill healthcare professionals of the future, is effective and can change their behaviours in practice to enhance patient care in chronic pain management. PNE has been shown to be useful in patient care in conjunction with other treatment methods. If this intervention is successful in altering pain attitudes and knowledge in keeping with modern science then students may feel more confident and able to manage pain post qualification. The findings of this study will support or refute the addition of PNE into healthcare professional undergraduate programmes.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERPain neuroscience educationTwo different lectures covering essential clinical skills but one designed to explore the hypothesis
OTHERRed flag educationTwo different lectures covering essential clinical skills but one designed to explore the hypothesis

Timeline

Start date
2018-10-01
Primary completion
2019-10-15
Completion
2019-10-15
First posted
2018-10-18
Last updated
2020-03-23

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03710837. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.