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Improving Health for Patients With Chronic LBP in Rural Communities Through Telerehabilitation
Sponsor: Johns Hopkins University
Summary
Physical therapy is the first line of treatment for patients with low back pain (LBP) and has been shown to be a cost-effective method for improving pain and disability in patients with chronic LBP; however, despite this effectiveness, only 7-13% of patients go on to receive physical therapy services with patients in rural communities being especially limited to do lack of provider availability, transportation, and missed work time leading to greater rates of LBP-related disability and opioid consumption. With the rapid emergence of digital treatment approaches to physical therapy (i.e., telerehabilitation), access could be improved by reducing or eliminating many barriers that patients report; however, it is unclear how to appropriately incorporate digital treatment approaches into existing health care models. The investigators propose a prospective randomized clinical trial conducted at a health system serving rural communities to determine the effectiveness of innovative risk-informed telerehabilitation versus standard educational control for patients with chronic LBP that will match individual patients with specific physical therapy delivery (physical therapy telehealth visits or psychologically informed physical therapy telehealth visits) based on the patient's psychosocial risk of poor outcomes.
Official title: ARBOR Telehealth: Improving Health for Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain in Rural Communities Through Improved Access to Telerehabilitation
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
434
Start Date
2025-01-27
Completion Date
2028-08-31
Last Updated
2025-09-15
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Standardized Education
Patients randomized to the standardized education group will receive registered access to a study website with access to evidence-based education for patients with chronic LBP. Each participant will have unique login credentials to allow for tracking of individual patient use. The website will include important education on the etiology of chronic LBP and evidence-based suggestions for self-management of symptoms. Education will focus on the importance of maintaining healthy levels of physical activity and avoiding bedrest.
Telerehabilitation
Based on prior SBTS risk stratification, participants in the risk-informed telerehabilitation group will receive subsequent care using an evidence-based treatment protocol designed for video visits to be informed by a participant's baseline risk score with elements ranging from standard physical therapy telehealth visits (low-to-medium risk) to PIPT telehealth visits (high-risk).
Locations (2)
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Tidalhealth
Salisbury, Maryland, United States