Perceived Treatment Needs
Cross-source consensus on Perceived Treatment Needs from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
How it works
Benefits
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- The most commonly perceived treatment needs across all groups were exercise, "wait and see," medication, and physiotherapy. — 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
- Structural framing produced a marked shift away from self-management and toward passive, investigative, and invasive interventions. — 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
- Participants receiving best practice education more frequently chose exercise and other low-cost self-management options, and less frequently endorsed unnecessary or potentially harmful interventions. — 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 and BP+PS groups showed very similar treatment preference profiles, with only small differences between them. — 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 mechanism behind structural framing's effect is that patients logically infer structural investigations and interventions are required when pain is attributed to structural 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