TY - JOUR
T1 - Managing shoulder pain: a meta-ethnography exploring healthcare providers' experiences
AU - Maxwell, Christina
AU - Robinson, Katie
AU - McCreesh, Karen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Objective: To review and synthesize qualitative research studies exploring the experiences of Healthcare Providers (HCPs) of managing shoulder pain. Methods: A meta-ethnographic approach was adopted to review and synthesize eligible studies. The findings from each included study were translated into one another using Noblit and Hares’ seven-stage process. A systematic search of eleven electronic databases was conducted in February 2021. Methodological quality was assessed using the CASP Appraisal Tool. Results: Ten studies were included in the meta-synthesis, all deemed of high methodological quality. Three themes were identified; (1) Lack of consensus: “we all have different approaches.” (2) Challenges to Changing Practice: It’s “really hard to change and switch to a different approach,” (3) Getting “Buy in” to Treatment: “…so you have to really sell it early”. Conclusion: Healthcare providers working with people with shoulder pain struggle to reconcile, often conflicting, research recommendations with their own clinical experience, beliefs and patient expectations. These findings help explain the continued lack of consensus on how best to manage shoulder pain in clinical practice.IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATION Healthcare providers (HCPs) working with people with shoulder pain struggle to resolve conflicts between evidence-based recommendations, clinical experience, their own shoulder pain beliefs and patient expectations and preferences. Stronger collaboration across professional disciplines is needed to address the current lack of consensus on the management of shoulder pain. Many HCP’s find it difficult to engage patients with shoulder pain in exercise and they work hard to “sell” this approach to patients using strategies such as education, shared decision making and therapeutic alliance.
AB - Objective: To review and synthesize qualitative research studies exploring the experiences of Healthcare Providers (HCPs) of managing shoulder pain. Methods: A meta-ethnographic approach was adopted to review and synthesize eligible studies. The findings from each included study were translated into one another using Noblit and Hares’ seven-stage process. A systematic search of eleven electronic databases was conducted in February 2021. Methodological quality was assessed using the CASP Appraisal Tool. Results: Ten studies were included in the meta-synthesis, all deemed of high methodological quality. Three themes were identified; (1) Lack of consensus: “we all have different approaches.” (2) Challenges to Changing Practice: It’s “really hard to change and switch to a different approach,” (3) Getting “Buy in” to Treatment: “…so you have to really sell it early”. Conclusion: Healthcare providers working with people with shoulder pain struggle to reconcile, often conflicting, research recommendations with their own clinical experience, beliefs and patient expectations. These findings help explain the continued lack of consensus on how best to manage shoulder pain in clinical practice.IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATION Healthcare providers (HCPs) working with people with shoulder pain struggle to resolve conflicts between evidence-based recommendations, clinical experience, their own shoulder pain beliefs and patient expectations and preferences. Stronger collaboration across professional disciplines is needed to address the current lack of consensus on the management of shoulder pain. Many HCP’s find it difficult to engage patients with shoulder pain in exercise and they work hard to “sell” this approach to patients using strategies such as education, shared decision making and therapeutic alliance.
KW - healthcare provider
KW - meta-ethnography
KW - qualitative evidence synthesis
KW - qualitative research
KW - rotator cuff
KW - Shoulder pain
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85126236107&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/09638288.2021.1897886
DO - 10.1080/09638288.2021.1897886
M3 - Article
C2 - 33847548
AN - SCOPUS:85126236107
SN - 0963-8288
VL - 44
SP - 3772
EP - 3784
JO - Disability and Rehabilitation
JF - Disability and Rehabilitation
IS - 15
ER -