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The Influence of "Labels" for Neck Pain on Recovery Expectations Following a Motor Vehicle Crash: An Online-Randomized Vignette-Based Experiment.

Authors :
YANFEI XIE
COSTA, NATHALIA
SÖDERLUND, ANNE
ZADRO, JOSHUA
MALMSTRÖM, EVA-MAJ
GRANT, GENEVIEVE
JULL, GWENDOLEN
WESTERGREN, HANS
KASCH, HELGE
MACDERMID, JOY
TRELEAVEN, JULIA
CURATOLO, MICHELE
LYKKEGAARD RAVN, SOPHIE
ANDERSEN, TONNY
REBBECK, TRUDY
STERLING, MICHELE
Source :
Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy; Nov2024, Vol. 54 Issue 11, p1-10, 10p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

* OBJECTIVES: To (1) investigate whether different labels for neck pain after a motor vehicle crash (MVC) influenced recovery expectations and management beliefs, (2) explore reasons for low recovery expectations and greater likelihood for lodging a claim, and (3) explore the moderating effect of neck pain history and sociodemographic characteristics. * DESIGN: Online randomized experiment with nested qualitative content analysis. * METHODS: We randomized 2229 participants from the general population (mean age: 46.7 ± 17.5 years; 72.4% females; 66% with previous or current neck pain; 10% with an MVC experience) to read 1 of 5 scenarios describing a patient with neck pain after an MVC, each was labeled as whiplash injury, whiplash-associated disorder, posttraumatic neck pain, neck pain, or neck strain. The primary outcome was recovery expectations, rated on a 0- to 10-point scale. * RESULTS: Participants allocated to whiplashassociated disorder or neck pain had lower recovery expectations than those allocated to neck strain (adjusted mean difference [95% confidence interval]: -0.5 [-0.9 to -0.1] for both comparisons). Whiplash-associated disorder led to more recovery uncertainty, while neck pain led to greater doubt about the health care provider. Most secondary outcomes showed significant but small differences. Participants allocated to neck strain were less inclined to claim than those allocated to whiplash-associated disorder or whiplash injury due to less perceived need for financial support. Neck pain history moderated labeling effects on recovery expectations; household income moderated the claim intention. * CONCLUSIONS: Labels for neck pain after an MVC influenced recovery expectations and management preferences. The clinical relevance of the small effects was unclear. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01906011
Volume :
54
Issue :
11
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180574772
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2519/jospt.2024.12590