• J Rehabil Med · Nov 2004

    Comparative Study

    Individual or group rehabilitaion for people with low back pain: a comparative study with 6-month follow-up.

    • Matti Nykänen and Katri Koivisto.
    • Punkaharju Rehabilitation Centre, Punkaharju, Finland. matti.nykanen@punkahk.com
    • J Rehabil Med. 2004 Nov 1; 36 (6): 262-6.

    ObjectiveTo compare the effectiveness of group rehabilitation and individually dosed rehabilitation in treating chronic low back pain.DesignInstitutional rehabilitation intervention in 2 nonrandomized groups with a 6-month post-intervention follow-up.SubjectsPersons with chronic low back pain: 64 group-rehabilitated and 66 individually rehabilitated.MethodsThe rehabilitation period for all subjects was 21 days. Those being group-rehabilitated, about 10 patients per group, had a common programme including 3-5 exercise groups per day, group discussions and lectures including back and neck school. Local physical therapy was given if neeeded. The individually rehabilitated subjects had individually designed programmes: local physical therapy, muscle strengthening programme, group exercises and participating in back school. The duration of the guided programme was 62 hours for group rehabilitation and 45 hours for individual rehabilitation.ResultsDuring the rehabilitation period the strength and flexibility of individually rehabilitated subjects improved more than that of group-rehabilitated subjects (p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively). After the 6-month follow-up period, group-rehabilitated subjects showed a decrease in the Oswestry and pain indexes, while individually rehabilitated subjects showed an increase in the Oswestry index. The group-rehabilitated subjects evaluated the goals of rehabilitation to have been attained better and considered themselves better motivated in self-care. The costs of the 2 rehabilitation programs were approximately equal.ConclusionThese tentative results suggest that group rehabilitation can compete with individual rehabilitation at least in short-term follow-up.

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