N of 1 studies – great examples

This study examined whether it’s more fruitful to expose people to many activities they’ve previously avoided, or instead, to limit the number of activities each person was exposed to. This is SUCH an important component of therapy where people have avoided doing things that bother them because they anticipate either that their pain will go to untolerable levels (or interfere with other important things like sleep) or because they’re worried they’ll do harm to themselves. Why? Because doing things in one safe space is not life. We do lots of activities in lots of different spaces, and most of them are unpredictable and we don’t have a ‘safe person’ to rely on. It’s perhaps one of the reasons exercise carried out in a gym might not transfer into greater reductions in disability in daily life – and why involving occupational therapists in pain management as ‘knowledge translation experts’ is such a good thing. Caneiro, J. P., Smith, A., Rabey, M., Moseley, G. L., & O’Sullivan, P. (2017). Process of Change in Pain-Related Fear: Clinical Insights From a Single Case Report of Persistent Back Pain Managed With Cognitive Functional Therapy. Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy, 47(9), 637-651. https://doi.org/10.2519/jospt.2017.7371 Lucky last – a single case study exploring the process of change experienced by one person undergoing cognitive functional therapy. While recent meta-...
Source: HealthSkills Weblog - Category: Anesthesiology Authors: Tags: Chronic pain Clinical reasoning Low back pain Research Science in practice pain management single case experimental design Source Type: blogs