When you’re treating your patients back pain, and they tell you they’re going to have to give up work, surfing, cycling or something else they love because of their back pain, what do you say? How will this affect your treatment? How can you incorporate psychosocial factors into your assessment and treatment?
We often feel like the success or failure of a treatment is largely dependent on whether we are providing the “right” treatment or rehab exercises. Our treatment has a large role in recovery, but how do our patients psychosocial factors affect their recovery and response to treatment? If your patient believes they will or won’t get better, will this affect their outcome? How does pain hypervigilance, catastrophising and your patients response to stress influence your assessment and treatment?
In this online course with Dr Mark Jones, you will explore:
This is part 2 in a 5 part series to help you develop your clinical reasoning.
In part 1 you explored how to quickly recognise diagnostic patterns, and confirm our diagnoses and treatment decisions with “slow” analytical clinical reasoning to get the best results for our patients.
Part 3 will take you through how to screen for psychosocial factors in your patient interview, how to unpack your patient’s beliefs and feelings, and important areas & questions you need to include in your subjective assessment.
In Part 4 you will explore types of pain your patients experience, including neuropathic, nociceptive and nociplastic (maladaptive CNS sensitisation). You will discover how to use clinical patterns and tests in cervical spine neuropathic pain patients, demonstrated in a case study, plus how to identify strength, ROM, motor control and neurodynamic impairments related to your patients pain.
Part 5 covers precautions and contraindications to assessment and treatment, red flags you need to identify, when to get your patient immediate medical attention, and a case study example of red flags masquerading as shoulder pain. You will explore how to put all of the information you have gained together with clinical reasoning to develop a treatment plan.
Are you ready to take your clinical outcomes to a new level?
Start your 7 day trial