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Factors associated with physiotherapists' confidence during assessment of clinical cervical and lumbar spine instability
Author(s) -
Cook Chad,
Brismée JeanMichel,
Sizer Philip S
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
physiotherapy research international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.509
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1471-2865
pISSN - 1358-2267
DOI - 10.1002/pri.27
Subject(s) - confidence interval , medicine , physical therapy , lumbar spine , physical medicine and rehabilitation , surgery
Background and Purpose. Physiotherapists commonly encounter patients with complaints of vague, indistinguishable neck and back pain, such as clinical spine instability. Since confidence is a component of expert clinical practice, we were interested in measuring expert clinicians' confidence in diagnosing and assessing clinical spine instability. The aims of the present study were to factor out the common ‘identifiers’ associated with physiotherapists' objective, physical diagnosis and assessment of clinical spine instability, and to determine the association of reported diagnostic confidence to these identifiers. Method. The study used data from a Delphi instrument for the factor analysis and a survey of APTA Board‐certified orthopaedic specialists for report of confidence. Using an ologit regression analysis, the identifier themes and clinical background characteristics were associated with confidence in diagnosis of clinical spine instability. Results. Only clinical cervical spine instability obtained significant findings. The identifier ‘observable or palpable abnormalities of motion during movement assessment in clinical practice’ was positively associated with reported confidence in diagnosis, as was the influence of manual therapy background models: Cyriax, Maitland, McKenzie, NAIOMPT, Osteopathic, Paris and other. Male gender yielded negative association with reported confidence. No factors were associated with reported lumbar confidence. Conclusions. Multiple backgrounds of physiotherapists demonstrate confidence in detecting clinical spine instability using observable or palpable methods to detect abnormal movements. Copyright © 2005 Whurr Publishers Ltd.

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