Move to health-a holistic approach to the management of chronic low back pain: an intervention and implementation protocol developed for a pragmatic clinical trial

Daniel I Rhon, Julie M Fritz, Tina A Greenlee, Katie E Dry, Rachel J Mayhew, Mary C Laugesen, Edita Dragusin, Deydre S Teyhen, Daniel I Rhon, Julie M Fritz, Tina A Greenlee, Katie E Dry, Rachel J Mayhew, Mary C Laugesen, Edita Dragusin, Deydre S Teyhen

Abstract

Background: The prevalence of chronic pain conditions is growing. Low back pain was the primary cause of disability worldwide out of 156 conditions assessed between 1990 and 2016, according to the Global Burden of Disease Study. Conventional medical approaches have failed to identify effective and long-lasting approaches for the management of chronic pain, and often fail to consider the multiple domains that influence overall health and can contribute to the pain experience. Leading international organizations that focus on pain research have stated the importance of considering these other domains within holistic and multidisciplinary frameworks for treating pain. While the research behind the theoretical link between these domains and chronic pain outcomes has expanded greatly over the last decade, there have been few practical and feasible methods to implement this type of care in normal clinical practice.

Methods: The purpose of this manuscript is to describe an implementation protocol that is being used to deliver a complex holistic health intervention at multiple sites within a large government health system, as part of a larger multisite trial for patients with chronic low back pain. The Move to Health program developed by the US Army Medical Command was tailored for specific application to patients with low back pain and begins by providing an empirical link between eight different health domains (that include physical, emotional, social, and psychological constructs) and chronic low back pain. Through a six-step process, a health coach leverages motivational interviewing and information from a personal health inventory to guide the patient through a series of conversations about behavioral lifestyle choices. The patient chooses which domains they want to prioritize, and the health coach helps implement the plan with the use of SMART (Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Realistic, Time-bound) goals and a series of resources for every domain, triaged from self-management to specialist referral.

Discussion: Complex interventions described in clinical trials are often challenging to implement because they lack sufficient details. Implementation protocols can improve the ability to properly deliver trial interventions into regular clinical practice with increased fidelity.

Trial registration: Implementation of this intervention protocol was developed for a clinical trial that was registered a priori (clinicaltrials.gov #NCT04172038).

Keywords: Behavioral health; Chronic pain; Complementary and integrated health; Health coach; Holistic health; Low back pain; Motivational interviewing; Multidisciplinary care; SMART goals.

Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

© 2021. The Author(s).

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Move to Health Wheel. A Original move to health wheel with all 8 domains. B 5-domain wheel where emotional, spiritual, personal development, family/social relationships, and surroundings were consolidated into “Intrinsic” and “Extrinsic” well-being
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Process steps for the M2H intervention for patients with chronic low back pain
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
Integration of program in clinical practice and suggested timeline for events

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Source: PubMed

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