scholarly journals Interdisciplinary Co-design Framework in Healthcare Design for Older Adult Patients with Chronic Low-back Pain

Author(s):  
Muhammad Tufail ◽  
HaeBin Lee ◽  
Hwang Kim ◽  
KwanMyung Kim

This study presents three forms of interdisciplinary expertise in the healthcare design context to approach a particular multifaceted problem around the current healthcare for older adult patients with chronic low-back pain (LBP). Using an interdisciplinary co-design framework, first, our design approach performs the role of an initiator to define the problem by exploring the current context of healthcare. Second, it facilitates the experiences of experts and patients to reach the roots of the problem by functioning as a mediator. Third, our approach fulfills the primary role of healthcare design in producing new meanings considering the principles of patient-centeredness. These roles significantly contributed to the design of healthcare innovations. Our framework transformed the distributed disciplinary knowledge developed while tackling the multifaceted problem into new forms of expertise for collaboration in healthcare innovation.

Pain ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-168 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gordon Waddell ◽  
Mary Newton ◽  
Iain Henderson ◽  
Douglas Somerville ◽  
Chris J. Main

Physiotherapy ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 94 (2) ◽  
pp. 115-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steve R. Woby ◽  
Neil K. Roach ◽  
Martin Urmston ◽  
Paul J. Watson

Author(s):  
Rakesh Jain ◽  
Shailesh Jain

The landmark paper discussed in this chapter, ‘Pain-related fear is more disabling than pain itself: Evidence on the role of pain-related fear in chronic back pain disability’, published by Crombez et al. in 1999, investigates the issue of disability in chronic low back pain and explores the role of psychological factors in disability. The paper reports on three independent chronic low back pain studies in which behavioural performance and the degree of reported disability were correlated with psychological factors such as catastrophization, negative affect, anxiety, and pain-related fear (e.g. fear of re-injury). In a counterintuitive finding, pain-related fear was more disabling that the pain itself. This paper thus highlighted the need to assess and address the psychological domains of pain; it also validated three questionnaires that are important in the pain field, and established a biopsychosocial approach to understanding, explaining, and treating chronic low back pain.


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