Brief Summary:
Low back pain is a common musculoskeletal disorder that affects approximately 80% of adults. Low back pain causes disability and functional impairment and places a significant burden on national health expenditures. Factors such as trauma, high body mass index, heavy working conditions, and weak abdominal and back muscles can cause low back pain. The most common cause of lower back pain is regional mechanical dysfunction. Rather than a single acute trauma, repetitive, cumulative traumas over time play a significant role. Risk factors such as heavy living and working conditions, poor static and dynamic posture, improper use of body mechanics, decreased strength and flexibility of abdominal and back muscles, reduced cardiovascular endurance, smoking, and vibration are known to contribute to back pain. Therefore, it is crucial to educate individuals with back pain and those at risk of developing it about these preparatory and symptom-aggravating factors. Back pain negatively affects many activities of individuals, including social life, lifting weights, carrying objects, walking, bending, standing, travelling, and dressing, thereby reducing their quality of life. Therefore, it is crucial to treat lower back pain using the effective methods recommended in the literature. If lower back pain persists for more than six months, it is classified as chronic lower back pain.
The treatment of chronic low back pain includes surgical approaches and conservative treatment. The aim of conservative treatment is to bring the patient's current condition to the best possible level. To this end, functional restoration is important in terms of both the rehabilitation of the primary damaged area and the dysfunctional secondary areas in order to accelerate the return to activity and reduce the chance of recurrence of low back pain. A treatment and rehabilitation programme is necessary to maintain the patient's optimal physiological and biomechanical fitness and to reduce the frequency of recurrent episodes of back pain. The goals of treatment in patients with chronic back pain are to reduce pain, prevent loss of condition that may develop as a result of prolonged immobilisation, prevent recurrence, resolve psychosocial problems within a multidisciplinary approach, reduce the rate of degeneration, and ensure early return to normal activities and work. In patients with chronic low back pain, pain, spasm, decreased muscle strength, and impaired posture reduce physical endurance and negatively affect the patient's functional capacity and quality of life. Conventional treatment for chronic low back pain includes conservative treatment methods. These conservative treatment methods include electrophysical agents, massage, traction, manual treatment methods, and exercise. Effective results have been reported in patients with chronic low back pain using these conservative treatment methods.
Patient education is another treatment method that has recently begun to be used in patients with chronic back pain. In chronic lower back pain, factors such as the cause of the pain, negative factors that may contribute to the discomfort and exacerbate the symptoms, how to manage lower back pain, ways to prevent pain, exercises and proper postures to reduce pain, and harmful movements and positions to avoid in daily life can be included in patient education for chronic lower back pain. It has been reported that patient education in patients with chronic lower back pain can have positive effects on treatment outcomes by reducing pain, disability, and fear of movement.
The literature highlights the limited number of studies investigating the effectiveness of patient education as an adjunct to conventional treatment in patients with chronic low back pain, suggesting that further studies in this area could make important contributions to the literature. In light of this, the aim of this study is to compare the effects of conventional treatment and patient education administered in addition to conventional treatment on pain intensity, disability status, and quality of life in patients with chronic low back pain, and to share the findings with the literature.