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Non-pharmacological management of osteoporotic...
Journal article

Non-pharmacological management of osteoporotic vertebral fractures: Patient perspectives and experiences

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To understand perceptions on rehabilitation after vertebral fracture, non-pharmacological strategies, and virtual care from the perspective of individuals living with vertebral fractures. DESIGN AND SETTING: We conducted semi-structured interviews online and performed a thematic and content analysis from a post-positivism perspective. PARTICIPANTS: Ten individuals living with osteoporotic vertebral fractures (9F, 1 M, aged 71  ±  8 years). RESULTS: Five themes emerged: pain is the defining limitation of vertebral fracture recovery; delayed diagnosis impacts recovery trajectory; living with fear; being dissatisfied with fracture management; and "getting back into the game of life" using non-pharmacological strategies. CONCLUSION: Participants reported back pain and an inability to perform activities of daily living, affecting psychological and social well-being. Physiotherapy, education, and exercise were considered helpful and important to patients; however, issues with fracture identification and referral limited the use of these options. Participants believed that virtual rehabilitation was a feasible and effective alternative to in-person care, but perceived experience with technology, cost, and individualization of programs as barriers.

Authors

Tibert N; Ponzano M; Brien S; Funnell L; Gibbs JC; Jain R; Keller H; Laprade J; Morin SN; Papaioannou A

Journal

Clinical Rehabilitation, Vol. 37, No. 5, pp. 713–724

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication Date

May 1, 2023

DOI

10.1177/02692155221144370

ISSN

0269-2155

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