Best Practice Education
Cross-source consensus on Best Practice Education from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
How it works
Benefits
Risks & contraindications
Highlighted claims
- Best practice education emphasizes that most shoulder pain is not serious and is not a reliable indicator of tissue damage. — Perceptions of best practice, pain science and structure-focused education for rotator cuff-related shoulder pain: a content analysis of qualitative data from a randomised experiment
- Best practice education recommends simple self-management strategies including heat, cold, simple pain medicines, activity modification, and exercise. — Perceptions of best practice, pain science and structure-focused education for rotator cuff-related shoulder pain: a content analysis of qualitative data from a randomised experiment
- Best practice framing supports guideline-concordant self-management for rotator cuff-related shoulder pain. — Perceptions of best practice, pain science and structure-focused education for rotator cuff-related shoulder pain: a content analysis of qualitative data from a randomised experiment
- The BP group showed a modestly higher rate of unhappiness or frustration compared to both BP+PS and SF groups. — Perceptions of best practice, pain science and structure-focused education for rotator cuff-related shoulder pain: a content analysis of qualitative data from a randomised experiment
- Best practice framing — while reassuring clinically — can feel discordant or dismissive to some patients when delivered without additional pain science context. — Perceptions of best practice, pain science and structure-focused education for rotator cuff-related shoulder pain: a content analysis of qualitative data from a randomised experiment