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Person-centered care for musculoskeletal pain: Putting principles into practice

Nathan Hutting, J.P. Cañeiro, Otieno Martin Ong'wen, Maxi Miciak, Lisa Roberts

2022Musculoskeletal Science and Practice72 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Person-centered care specifically focuses on the whole person and is an important component of contemporary care for people with musculoskeletal pain conditions. Evidence suggests however, that some clinicians experience difficulties with integrating person-centered care principles into their clinical practice. Therefore, the purpose of this masterclass is to provide a framework that enables clinicians to incorporate person-centered principles in their management of people with musculoskeletal pain conditions. To support clinicians in overcoming some of the reported obstacles, we provide practical recommendations aimed at putting principles of person-centered care into practice. The framework supporting clinicians' delivery of person-centered care in practice consists of three key-principles: A) a biopsychosocial understanding of the person's experience; B) person-focused communication; and C) supported self-management. The framework includes three phases: 1) identification and goal setting, 2) coaching to self-management, and 3) evaluation. Building a therapeutic relationship underpins these phases and is an overarching element that weaves through the key-principles and phases of the framework. We use a clinical case to illustrate the practical implementation of these recommendations.

Topics & Concepts

Biopsychosocial modelCoachingMusculoskeletal painClinical PracticeMedicineNursingPatient-centered careElement (criminal law)PsychologyMedical educationHealth carePsychotherapistPhysical therapyPolitical scienceEconomicsLawEconomic growthPatient-Provider Communication in HealthcareEmpathy and Medical EducationClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills
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