0000000000286368

AUTHOR

B Espejo-tort

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Impact of Biomedical and Biopsychosocial Training Sessions on the Attitudes, Beliefs and Recommendations of Health Care Providers about Low Back Pain…

2011

The beliefs and attitudes of health care providers may contribute to chronic low back pain (LBP) disability, influencing the recommendations that they provide to their patients. An excessively biomedical style of undergraduate training can increase negative beliefs and attitudes about LBP, whereas instruction following a biopsychosocial model could possibly lessen these negative beliefs in health care professionals. The objectives of this study were to determine the effectiveness of 2 brief educational modules with different orientations (biomedical or biopsychosocial) on changing the beliefs and attitudes of physical therapy students and the recommendations that they give to patients. The …

AdultMaleBiopsychosocial modelHealth Knowledge Attitudes PracticeInservice TrainingAdolescentAttitude of Health PersonnelPsychological interventionYoung AdultSocial supportContinuing medical educationHealth careBack painHumansMedicinehealth care economics and organizationsbusiness.industrySocial SupportProfessional-Patient RelationsFear-avoidance modelequipment and suppliesLow back painBiomechanical PhenomenaPhysical TherapistsAnesthesiology and Pain MedicinePsicobiologiaNeurologyFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessLow Back Painhuman activitiesClinical psychology
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