Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Not Yet Recruiting

Not Yet RecruitingNCT06900231

Knowledge, Attitudes, and Beliefs About Musculoskeletal Pain Among Primary Care Health Professionals in Spain.

Knowledge, Attitudes, and Beliefs About Musculoskeletal Pain Among Primary Care Health Professionals in Different Autonomous Communities of Spain: A Cross-Sectional Study

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
300 (estimated)
Sponsor
Universitat de Lleida · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers

Summary

Background: Pain is a multifactorial experience where psychological and emotional factors influence the transition from acute to chronic pain, prognosis, and the adoption of inappropriate self-management strategies. In addition to psychological and emotional factors, healthcare professionals can contribute to the development of chronic disabilities in their patients by promoting hypervigilance and restricting normal activities, potentially reinforcing or altering patients' perceptions, leading to limited mobility. Existing scientific literature suggests that patients with chronic pain often feel they do not receive sufficient information from healthcare professionals that could help them better understand and manage pain, thereby improving their quality of life. Objectives: 1. To assess the current knowledge of pain neurophysiology among primary care professionals (medicine, physiotherapy, nursing, nutrition, and psychology) in Spain. 2. To evaluate attitudes and beliefs about chronic low back pain among primary care professionals (medicine, physiotherapy, nursing, nutrition, and psychology) in Spain. 3. To examine fear-avoidance beliefs related to pain among primary care professionals (medicine, physiotherapy, nursing, nutrition, and psychology) in Spain. Methodology: A cross-sectional descriptive study will be conducted to collect information from primary care health professionals (medicine, physiotherapy, psychology, nutrition, and nursing) in Spain, focusing on their current knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs about musculoskeletal pain. Applicability: This study will provide valuable insights into the current state of knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs about musculoskeletal pain among primary care health professionals in Spain. The findings will guide future educational interventions and policy recommendations to improve the management of musculoskeletal pain in primary care settings in Spain. Relevance: Scientifically, this will be the first study to evaluate the knowledge of primary care health professionals in Spain regarding pain neurophysiology, attitudes and beliefs about chronic low back pain, and fear-avoidance attitudes.

Detailed description

Background: Pain is a multifactorial experience where psychological and emotional factors influence the transition from acute to chronic pain, prognosis, and the adoption of inappropriate self-management strategies. In addition to psychological and emotional factors, healthcare professionals can contribute to the development of chronic disabilities in their patients by promoting hypervigilance and restricting normal activities, potentially reinforcing or altering patients' perceptions, leading to limited mobility. Existing scientific literature suggests that patients with chronic pain often feel they do not receive sufficient information from healthcare professionals that could help them better understand and manage pain, thereby improving their quality of life. Objectives: 1. To assess the current knowledge of pain neurophysiology among primary care professionals (medicine, physiotherapy, nursing, nutrition, and psychology) in Spain. 2. To evaluate attitudes and beliefs about chronic low back pain among primary care professionals (medicine, physiotherapy, nursing, nutrition, and psychology) in Spain. 3. To examine fear-avoidance beliefs related to pain among primary care professionals (medicine, physiotherapy, nursing, nutrition, and psychology) in Spain. Methodology: A cross-sectional descriptive study will be conducted to collect information from primary care health professionals (medicine, physiotherapy, psychology, nutrition, and nursing) in Spain, focusing on their current knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs about musculoskeletal pain. Applicability: This study will provide valuable insights into the current state of knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs about musculoskeletal pain among primary care health professionals in Spain. The findings will guide future educational interventions and policy recommendations to improve the management of musculoskeletal pain in primary care settings in Spain. Relevance: Scientifically, this will be the first study to evaluate the knowledge of primary care health professionals in Spain regarding pain neurophysiology, attitudes and beliefs about chronic low back pain, and fear-avoidance attitudes.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2025-05-01
Primary completion
2025-09-01
Completion
2025-11-01
First posted
2025-03-28
Last updated
2025-03-28

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Spain

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06900231. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.