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Effect of individually tailored biopsychosocial workplace interventions on chronic musculoskeletal pain, stress and work ability among laboratory technicians: randomized controlled trial protocol.

BMC musculoskeletal disorders
January 1, 1970
Kenneth Jay et al. (7 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to investigate the effect of an individually tailored biopsychosocial intervention, including mindfulness practice, on musculoskeletal pain, stress, and work disability in lab technicians with chronic pain.

Results Summary

The study implemented mindfulness as part of a multifactorial intervention to lower or prevent stress development, but specific results on mindfulness alone were not detailed in the abstract. The primary outcome focused on pain intensity reduction.

Population

Female laboratory technicians (18-67 years old) with chronic musculoskeletal pain (≥3 months, ≥3 days/week) in upper back, low back, neck, shoulder, elbow, or hand.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

10 weeks

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (6)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
individually tailored biopsychosocial intervention strategy
neutral
musculoskeletal pain, stress and work disability
lab technicians with a history of musculoskeletal pain
-
investigate the effect of
#1
individualized multifactorial intervention
neutral
-
female laboratory technician (18-67 years of age) with Pain intensity ≥ 3 lasting ≥3 months with a frequency of ≥ 3 days per week in one or more regions
-
receive
#2
increasing physical capacity through strength- and motor control training
increase
physical capacity
lab technicians with a history of musculoskeletal pain
-
addressing biopsychosocial elements of musculoskeletal pain
#3
lowering or preventing development of stress through mindfulness practice and learning de-catastrophizing pain management strategies through cognitive training
decrease
stress
lab technicians with a history of musculoskeletal pain
-
addressing biopsychosocial elements of musculoskeletal pain
#4
individualized multifactorial intervention
neutral
intensity of perceived musculoskeletal pain during the last week (average value of back, neck, shoulder, elbow and hand)
lab technicians with a history of musculoskeletal pain
-
between-group difference in
#5
individually tailored biopsychosocial intervention strategy
decrease
chronic musculoskeletal pain and stress
-
-
guide workplace initiatives designed towards reducing
#6
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Among laboratory technicians, the prevalence of neck and shoulder pain is widespread possibly due to typical daily work tasks such as pipetting, preparing vial samples for analysis, and data processing on a computer including mouse work - all tasks that require precision in motor control and may result in extended periods of time spent in static positions.In populations characterized by intense chronic musculoskeletal pain and diagnosed conditions in conjunction with psycho-physiological symptoms such as stress-related pain and soreness and other disabling conditions, multifactorial approaches applying a combination of individually tailored physical and cognitive strategies targeting the areas most needed, may be an effective solution to the physical and mental health challenges.The aim of this study is therefore to investigate the effect of an individually tailored biopsychosocial intervention strategy on musculoskeletal pain, stress and work disability in lab technicians with a history of musculoskeletal pain at a single worksite in Denmark. METHODS/DESIGN: In this single-blind two-armed parallel-group randomized controlled trial with allocation concealment, participants receive either an individualized multifactorial intervention or "usual care" for 10 weeks at the worksite. INCLUSION CRITERIA: 1) female laboratory technician (18-67 years of age) and 2) Pain intensity ≥ 3 (0-10 Visual Analogue Scale) lasting ≥3 months with a frequency of ≥ 3 days per week in one or more of the following regions: i) upper back i) low back iii) neck, iv) shoulder, v) elbow and/or vi) hand. EXCLUSION CRITERIA: 1) life-threatening disease and 2) pregnancy. Stress, as measured by Cohen´s perceived stress questionnaire is not an inclusion criteria, thus participants can participate regardless of their stress level.We will implement an individualized intervention addressing biopsychosocial elements of musculoskeletal pain with the following components; i) increasing physical capacity through strength- and motor control training; ii) lowering or preventing development of stress through mindfulness practice and learning de-catastrophizing pain management strategies through cognitive training.The primary outcome at 10-week follow-up is the between-group difference in intensity of perceived musculoskeletal pain during the last week (average value of back, neck, shoulder, elbow and hand) assessed by questionnaire (modified visual analogue scale 0-10). DISCUSSION: This study will provide experimental evidence to guide workplace initiatives designed towards reducing chronic musculoskeletal pain and stress. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02047669.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdolescentAdultAgedChronic PainFemaleFollow-Up StudiesHumansLaboratory PersonnelMiddle AgedMusculoskeletal PainOccupational ExposurePain MeasurementResistance TrainingSingle-Blind MethodSocial SupportStress, PsychologicalTreatment OutcomeWorkplaceYoung Adult
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations17
Citations/Year1.5
Relative Citation Ratio0.99
NIH Percentile49.9%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score1.79
Normalized Score0.67
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