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Journal article

Results of an International Survey of Practice Patterns for Establishing Prognosis in Neck Pain: The ICON Project

Abstract

Results of an international survey of health care providers for neck pain are reported. The survey specifically collected self-reported practice patterns for establishing a prognosis in neck pain. Over 440 responses from 27 countries were collected. Descriptive results indicate that respondents assigned large prognostic impact to factors including mechanism of injury and psychological or behavioral constructs. Range of motion, age and sex were routinely collected despite relatively moderate impact on prognosis. A comparison between chiropractic and manual/physical therapy groups showed differences in practice patterns that were unlikely to affect prognostic accuracy. The results suggest a gap exists between current best-evidence and actual practice when the goal is to establish a prognosis in neck pain.

Authors

Walton DM; MacDermid JC; Santaguida PL; Gross A; Carlesso L; ICON

Journal

The Open Orthopaedics Journal, Vol. 7, No. 1, pp. 387–395

Publisher

Bentham Science Publishers

Publication Date

September 20, 2013

DOI

10.2174/1874325001307010387

ISSN

1874-3250

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