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(C)onsumer focused (E)ducation on p(A)racetamol (S)ide (E)ffects, i(N)adequate (O)utcomes and (W)eaning (CEASE NOW) for individuals with low back pain: results of a feasibility study
oleh: Ornella Clavisi, Danijela Gnjidic, Manuela Ferreira, Barbara Mintzes, Paulo Ferreira, Carol Bennett, Melissa Baysari, Thomas Patterson, Justin Turner, Lisa Bywaters, Paula Beckenkamp
| Format: | Article |
|---|---|
| Diterbitkan: | BMJ Publishing Group 2022-11-01 |
Deskripsi
Objectives To determine the feasibility of a patient-education booklet to support patients with low back pain (LBP) to reduce paracetamol intake.Design Single group, repeated measures feasibility study.Setting Community.Participants Adults experiencing LBP of any kind and self-reporting consumption of paracetamol for LBP weekly for at least 1 month were invited to participate.Intervention Participants received a patient-education booklet 1 week after the baseline measures were collected. The intervention was designed to change beliefs, increase knowledge and self-efficacy to deprescribe paracetamol for their LBP and create discussion with a health professional through the mechanisms of motivation, capacity and opportunity.Primary outcome measures Feasibility of recruitment procedures, data collection and acceptability of the intervention.Secondary outcome measures Changes in motivation, self-efficacy, opportunity to deprescribe paracetamol for their LBP, paracetamol usage and LBP clinical outcomes at baseline, 1-week and 1-month follow-up.Results A total of 24 participants were recruited into the study within the timeframe of 3 months from study advertisement and all completed the study follow-up. There were no missing data for any outcome measure across all follow-up points, 22 (91.6%) participants were willing to participate in a future randomised control trial (RCT) and over 60% of participants responded positively to questions regarding acceptability of the patient-educational booklet. Overall, at the 1-month follow-up, approximately two thirds (15/24) of participants had an increase in motivation and self-efficacy scores and had discussed or intended to discuss their paracetamol use for LBP with a health professional.Conclusions The results of this study demonstrate that the patient-education booklet is feasible to implement, and both the intervention and study design were well-received by participants. This study supports the undertaking an RCT to assess the effects of the patient-education booklet on deprescribing paracetamol in people with LBP.