Little known health information that you or health care professionals might find interesting. Subscribe or follow, if interested.
Sunday, November 12, 2017
Measuring the Effects of various Manual Therapy Interventions
Here's my response to a reader who is interested in "Measuring the Effects of various Manual Therapy Interventions".
People typically get Manual Therapy to
* Increase mobility/flexibility and/or to
* Reduce Pain.
The reader pointed out - The Effects of various Manual Therapy Interventions typically cannot be tested/measured using cadavers or computer modeling, and often there is no valid “sham” therapy to measure against.
Let's look into this....
First let's start with a few references....
* Standardized Outcome Measures in Manual Therapy
* Cost effectiveness of physiotherapy, manual therapy, and general practitioner care for neck pain: economic evaluation alongside a randomised controlled trial - Commentary: Bootstrapping simplifies appreciation of statistical inferences
* Assessment tools for OT
* Guide to Outcomes Measurement for Patients With Low Back
* The effectiveness of manual therapy, physiotherapy and treatment by the general practitioner for chronic non-specific back and neck complaints
* Manual therapy followed by specific active exercises versus a placebo followed by specific active exercises on the improvement of functional disability in patients with chronic non specific low back pain: a randomized controlled trial
* Patient-Reported Outcome (PRO) questionnaires for people with pain in any spine region. A systematic review
* Patients' treatment beliefs in low back pain: development and validation of a questionnaire in primary care
* Physical Therapy Evaluation and Management of the Shoulder Complex
* Effectiveness of Manual Physical Therapy for Painful Shoulder Conditions: A Systematic Review
* Efficacy of Manual Therapy
* The Science and Practice of Manual Therapy - body language
* Immediate Changes Following Manual Therapy in Resting State Functional Connectivity As Measured By Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) In Subjects With Induced Low Back Pain
* Placebo response to manual therapy: something out of nothing?
**********************************************************************************************
Based on the above...."Measuring the Effects of various Manual Therapy Interventions" might be accomplished by....
* Ask the patient whether the manual therapy is effective or not. Listen to their story/narrative. Observe body language. Perhaps, use questionnaires.
* You can use more sophisticated efficacy measurement tools like fMRI, but these are usually out of the reach of most practitioners. Stress/Pain Measurement Tools like those used in Biofeedback can be used to test relaxation level (skin conductance and/or heart rate variability). Since stress/tension increases muscle tightness and increases pain, probably anything to reduce stress/anxiety will help therapy effectiveness
* The Therapist could increase the perceived effectiveness of the therapy by words/actions. This is due to enhancing the inherent Placebo Effect, which is a part of any health intervention.
* Lastly, if the perceived or measured effectiveness is slow going or non-existant, please consider psychological/emotional reasons for the chronic patient - "Are You “Sick and Tired” of Being “Sick and Tired”?" - Especially see questions therein.
* I'm sure there are more ways to measure efficacy of Manual Therapy. Perhaps the Measurement/Testing Modalities of related Health/Medical Interventions might be useful to measure the efficacy of Manual Therapy, too. Please add your comments to add to this discussion.
************************************************************************************
Article is for information only and is not medical advice. See full disclaimers at TG Ideas LLC.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)