Stubbs, Carl and Mc Auliffe, Sean and Chimenti, Ruth L and Coombes, Brooke K and Haines, Terry and Heales, Luke and de Vos, Robert-Jan and Lehman, Greg and Mallows, Adrian and Michner, Lori A and Millar, Neal BW and O’Neill, Seth and O’Sullivan, Kieran and Plinsinga, Melanie and Rathleff, Michael and Rio, Ebonie and Ross, Megan and Roy, Jean-Sebastien and Silbernagel, Karin Gravare and Thomson, Athol and Trevail, Tim and Akker-Scheek, Inge and Vicenzino, Bill and Vlaeyen, Johan WS and Pinto, Rafael Zambelli and Malliaras, Peter (2023) Which psychological and psychosocial constructs are important to measure in future tendinopathy clinical trials? A modified international Delphi study with expert clinician/researchers and people with tendinopathy. Journal of Orthopaedic and Sports Physical Therapy, 54 (1). pp. 14-25. DOI https://doi.org/10.2519/jospt.2023.11903
Stubbs, Carl and Mc Auliffe, Sean and Chimenti, Ruth L and Coombes, Brooke K and Haines, Terry and Heales, Luke and de Vos, Robert-Jan and Lehman, Greg and Mallows, Adrian and Michner, Lori A and Millar, Neal BW and O’Neill, Seth and O’Sullivan, Kieran and Plinsinga, Melanie and Rathleff, Michael and Rio, Ebonie and Ross, Megan and Roy, Jean-Sebastien and Silbernagel, Karin Gravare and Thomson, Athol and Trevail, Tim and Akker-Scheek, Inge and Vicenzino, Bill and Vlaeyen, Johan WS and Pinto, Rafael Zambelli and Malliaras, Peter (2023) Which psychological and psychosocial constructs are important to measure in future tendinopathy clinical trials? A modified international Delphi study with expert clinician/researchers and people with tendinopathy. Journal of Orthopaedic and Sports Physical Therapy, 54 (1). pp. 14-25. DOI https://doi.org/10.2519/jospt.2023.11903
Stubbs, Carl and Mc Auliffe, Sean and Chimenti, Ruth L and Coombes, Brooke K and Haines, Terry and Heales, Luke and de Vos, Robert-Jan and Lehman, Greg and Mallows, Adrian and Michner, Lori A and Millar, Neal BW and O’Neill, Seth and O’Sullivan, Kieran and Plinsinga, Melanie and Rathleff, Michael and Rio, Ebonie and Ross, Megan and Roy, Jean-Sebastien and Silbernagel, Karin Gravare and Thomson, Athol and Trevail, Tim and Akker-Scheek, Inge and Vicenzino, Bill and Vlaeyen, Johan WS and Pinto, Rafael Zambelli and Malliaras, Peter (2023) Which psychological and psychosocial constructs are important to measure in future tendinopathy clinical trials? A modified international Delphi study with expert clinician/researchers and people with tendinopathy. Journal of Orthopaedic and Sports Physical Therapy, 54 (1). pp. 14-25. DOI https://doi.org/10.2519/jospt.2023.11903
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: to identify which psychological and psychosocial constructs to include in a core outcome set to guide future clinical trials in the tendinopathy field. DESIGN: modified International Delphi study. METHODS: In three online Delphi rounds, we presented 35 psychological and psychosocial constructs to an international panel of 38 clinician/researchers and people with tendinopathy. Using a 9-point Likert scale (1 – not important to include, 9 -critical to include), consensus for construct inclusion required ≥70% of respondents rating‘extremely critical to include’ (score ≥ 7) and ≤15% rating ‘not important to include’ (score ≤3). Consensus for exclusion required ≥70% of respondents rating ‘not important to include’ (score ≤ 3) and ≤15% of rating ‘critical to include’ (score ≥ 7). RESULTS: Thirty-six participants (95% of 38) completed round one, 90% (n=34) completed round two and 87% (n=33) completed round three. Four constructs were deemed important to include as part of a core outcome set: kinesiophobia (82%, median: 8, inter quartile range (IQR): 1.0), pain beliefs (76%, median: -7, IQR: 1.0), pain related self-efficacy (71% median: 7, IQR: 2.0) and fear avoidance beliefs (73%, median: -7, IQR: 1.0). Six constructs were deemed not important to include: perceived injustice (82%), individual attitudes of family members (74%), social isolation and loneliness (73%), job satisfaction (73%), coping (70%) and educational attainment (70%). Clinician/researchers and people with tendinopathy reached consensus that kinesiophobia, pain beliefs, pain self-efficacy and fear avoidance beliefs were important psychological constructs to measure in tendinopathy clinical trials.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | Kinesiophobia, pain self -efficacy, fear-avoidance beliefs, pain beliefs |
Divisions: | Faculty of Science and Health Faculty of Science and Health > Sport, Rehabilitation and Exercise Sciences, School of |
SWORD Depositor: | Phineas Wenlock |
Depositing User: | Phineas Wenlock |
Date Deposited: | 09 Oct 2023 15:56 |
Last Modified: | 15 Jan 2024 10:01 |
URI: | http://repository.essex.ac.uk/id/eprint/36591 |