Purpose: Cognitive functional therapy (CFT) is an individualised person-centred biopsychosocial intervention that demonstrated large and sustained clinically important improvements in people with chronic, disabling low back pain (LBP) in the RESTORE randomised controlled trial. This study aimed to explore physiotherapists' experiences of delivering CFT in the RESTORE trial.
Materials And Methods: Cross-sectional qualitative design using reflexive thematic analysis with interviews of 15 treating physiotherapists (3-25 years experience) across Perth and Sydney.
Question: Do five baseline moderators identify patients with chronic low back pain who respond best to cognitive functional therapy (CFT) when compared with usual care?
Design: Secondary analysis of the RESTORE randomised controlled trial.
Participants: A total of 492 adults with low back pain for > 3 months with at least moderate pain-related activity limitation.
Intervention: Participants were allocated to CFT alone or CFT plus biofeedback; these two groups were combined for this secondary analysis.
Cognitive functional therapy (CFT) is a person-centered biopsychosocial physiotherapy intervention that has recently demonstrated large, durable effects in reducing pain and disability in people with chronic low back pain (CLBP). However, exploration of the treatment process from the patients' perspectives, including the process of gaining control and agency over CLBP, is relatively understudied in this patient population. This qualitative study explored the experiences of eight participants from the RESTORE trial through longitudinally following their experiences, including interviews during baseline, mid-treatment, end-treatment, and 12-month follow-up.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Low back pain is the leading cause of years lived with disability globally, but most interventions have only short-lasting, small to moderate effects. Cognitive functional therapy (CFT) is an individualised approach that targets unhelpful pain-related cognitions, emotions, and behaviours that contribute to pain and disability. Movement sensor biofeedback might enhance treatment effects.
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