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Self-management of Low Back Pain in Horticulture Workers

Self-management of Low Back Pain in Horticulture Workers

Recruiting
18-65 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

The primary purpose of this hybrid comparative effectiveness and implementation study is to compare two self-management strategies to manage pain, and adjust work-related ergonomic risk in nursery and landscape workers. This cluster randomized pragmatic study will compare interventions with different degrees of support and Specific aim 1 is to determine if self-management plus individualized guided participatory ergonomic choices (SM+PE) is more effective than self-management (SM) alone for improving LBP among horticulture workers. Both groups will review short self-management video modules to introduce general pain concepts and the importance of managing pain without medication, risks of opioid use, self-management of pain, and simple ergonomic strategies for both groups. Both groups will choose 1 self-management strategy to manage pain at home and 1 ergonomic workplace strategy to limit pain. The SM+PE participant's choices will be guided by researchers to match to their self-identified most difficult work activities due to pain and to those strategies that could be used more often rather than just their preferences. This group will also: 1) review videos of their work tasks, and 2) receive text reminders to support implementation. Surveys will include instruments reflecting low back pain disability, pain, work ability, and affective or cognitive characteristics (self-efficacy, pain anxiety, depression, coping), collected at baseline, pre- and post-intervention, with follow-ups at 3- and 6-months. Workers will be videoed pre- and post-intervention to inform simulated work analysis for calculation of work risk and to compare any changes for the most difficult tasks. Specific aim 2 will identify contextual factors impacting engagement, adoption, effectiveness, and implementation. Interviews, focus groups, and field notes will be used to explain results and establish patterns to inform future translation.

Description

Primary dependent variables will be collected at all measurement points: pain severity, interference, and persistence, pain with specific work tasks, disability, work ability, and pain medication use. Affective or cognitive characteristics potentially impacting adoption and effectiveness (secondary dependent variables or confounders) such as coping, fear, anxiety, depression, will also be collected.The post- and follow-up survey questions will also reflect adoption, opinions of interventions, effectiveness, facilitators, and barriers.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

Workers

  1. working full time (30 hours or more per week) in physically demanding nursery or landscape work
  2. currently employed or self-employed in small or medium size businesses
  3. 18 years of age or older
  4. English or Spanish speaking
  5. experiencing continuous or intermittent LBP over the past 3 months

Owners, managers, supervisors

  1. Owners, managers, or supervisors who meet the same inclusion criteria as workers will be eligible to participate in the training interventions as well as the supervisory roles.
  2. All owners, managers, and supervisors who are willing to participate will be enrolled.

Exclusion Criteria:

Workers

  1. history of major trauma, surgery, or spinal nerve blocks in the past year
  2. seeking disability or workman's compensation
  3. self-disclosed pregnancy

Study details
    Back Pain

NCT06153199

University of Florida

24 June 2024

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