Articles: pain-management.
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Pain is a complex condition and affects one's life beyond physical symptoms. National pain management recommendations include a whole-person approach that includes strengths (or resilience). ⋯ This study has clinical implications for supporting the use of digital health tools such as mobile applications for capturing contextual data directly from patients to enable nurses to provide more accessible and personalized care to patients.
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Self-efficacy for pain management is the key to successful pain management, yet little is known about the effect of cognitive performance on self-efficacy for pain management. This study aimed to examine to what extent cognitive performance is related to self-efficacy for pain management in older adults with chronic pain. ⋯ Greater cognitive performance in attention and executive function might be associated with better self-efficacy for pain management. Future longitudinal research is required to investigate the long-term implications of cognitive performance changes on the progress of self-efficacy for pain management in community-dwelling older adults.
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In health services research, the health care of the population is examined under everyday conditions. Scientific questions include medical, patient-oriented, system-, performance- and quality-related as well as health economics topics. In health services research, complex interventions, e.g., treatment concepts with multiple therapy components, and/or across multiple sectors, are often implemented. The design of studies in health services research is based on the research question, the setting, and the available data, which can come from a variety of sources.
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We developed the SupportPrim PT clinical decision support system (CDSS) using the artificial intelligence method case-based reasoning to support personalised musculoskeletal pain management. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of the CDSS for patients in physiotherapy practice. A cluster randomised controlled trial was conducted in primary care in Norway. ⋯ No significant between-group differences were found for GPE. For PSFS, there was a significant difference favouring the control group, but this was less than the prespecified difference of 15%. We identified several study limitations and recommend further investigation into artificial intelligence applications for managing musculoskeletal pain.