Evidence-informed management of chronic low back pain with functional restoration
Abstract
Editors' preface
The management of chronic low back pain (CLBP) has proven to be very challenging in North America, as evidenced by its mounting socioeconomic burden. Choosing amongst available nonsurgical therapies can be overwhelming for many stakeholders, including patients, health providers, policy makers, and third-party payers. Although all parties share a common goal and wish to use limited health-care resources to support interventions most likely to result in clinically meaningful improvements, there is often uncertainty about the most appropriate intervention for a particular patient. To help understand and evaluate the various commonly used nonsurgical approaches to CLBP, the North American Spine Society has sponsored this special focus issue of The Spine Journal, titled Evidence-Informed Management of Chronic Low Back Pain Without Surgery. Articles in this special focus issue were contributed by leading spine practitioners and researchers, who were invited to summarize the best available evidence for a particular intervention and encouraged to make this information accessible to nonexperts. Each of the articles contains five sections (description, theory, evidence of efficacy, harms, and summary) with common subheadings to facilitate comparison across the 24 different interventions profiled in this special focus issue, blending narrative and systematic review methodology as deemed appropriate by the authors. It is hoped that articles in this special focus issue will be informative and aid in decision making for the many stakeholders evaluating nonsurgical interventions for CLBP.
Keywords: Functional restoration, Chronic low back pain, Biopsychosocial, Pain management
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FDA device/drug status: not applicable.
This research was supported in part by grants (R.J.G) from National Institutes of Health (grant numbers 1K05 MH071892 and 3R01 MH 045462) and the Department of Defense (grant number DAMD 17-03-1-0055), which are federal/state agencies.
Nothing of value received from a commercial entity related to this manuscript.
PII: S1529-9430(07)00906-0
doi:10.1016/j.spinee.2007.10.012
© 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
