Effectiveness of an eHealth‐Delivered Program to Empower People With Musculoskeletal Pain in Rural Australia: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Author:

Mesa‐Castrillon Carlos I.12ORCID,Simic Milena1ORCID,Ferreira Manuela L.1,Bennell Kim L.3,Luscombe Georgina M.4,Gater Kristy5,Beckenkamp Paula R.1,Michell Antonio1,Bauman Adrian1,de Luca Katie6,Bunker Stephen3,Clavisi Ornella7,Ferreira Paulo H.12

Affiliation:

1. University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. Sydney Musculoskeletal Health, Charles Perkins Centre, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health University of Sydney Sydney Australia

3. University of Melbourne Melbourne Victoria Australia

4. University of Sydney Orange Campus Orange New South Wales Australia

5. Dubbo Health Service Dubbo New South Wales Australia

6. Central Queensland University Brisbane Queensland Australia

7. Musculoskeletal Australia Melbourne Australia

Abstract

ObjectiveOur objective was to evaluate the effectiveness of a three‐month physiotherapist‐delivered eHealth physical activity program compared with usual care to improve function in adults with low back pain or knee osteoarthritis in rural Australia.MethodsThis was a parallel, two‐group, pragmatic, superiority, randomized controlled trial involving three‐ and six‐month posttreatment follow‐ups. There was a total of 156 adults with chronic nonspecific low back pain (n = 97) or knee osteoarthritis (n = 59) from rural Australia. The intervention involved an eHealth physical activity and an exercise program that included five to eight teleconsultations with a physiotherapist (primary time point three months) or usual care (eg, general practitioner, physiotherapy, and pain medication). The primary outcome was the Patient‐Specific Functional Scale (0–30), with a three‐point difference between groups being considered the minimum clinically important difference.ResultsParticipants receiving the eHealth intervention (n = 78) reported significantly greater and clinically worthwhile improvements in function (mean between‐group difference 3.6; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.3–5.9) compared to participants receiving usual care (n = 78). Small but statistically significantly greater improvements in disability (7.2 of 100; 95% CI 2.1–12.3) and quality of life (4.5 of 100; 95% CI 0.0–9.0) also favored the eHealth group. No clinical or statistical differences between groups were found for the secondary outcomes of pain, coping skills, and physical activity levels.ConclusionA physiotherapist‐delivered eHealth intervention is effective and provides clinically meaningful improvements in function compared to usual care for people with musculoskeletal pain in rural communities. These findings highlight the potential for eHealth‐based programs to improve access to evidence‐based exercise interventions for people with musculoskeletal pain in rural communities.image

Funder

Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney

Medibank Better Health Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Rheumatology

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