Title: Chronic nonspecific back pain
1Chronic nonspecific back pain
- Masters in Health Journalism
- Capstone Presentation
- Greg Turosak
- April 28, 2005
2Agenda for today
- Goals of a capstone in this program
- How this project fits into those goals
- What are Health Decision Guides?
- Rationale, evidence supporting HDGs
- How was this topic decided upon?
- Whats so interesting about chronic back pain?
- How was this topic researched and developed?
- What medical/expert advice influenced this
project? - Where can you find this project now, in the
future? - A look at selected parts of this project
- Questions
3Goals, requirements of a capstone
- An important health issue
- Contributes to public understanding
- Publishable in any medium
- Proceeds in consultation with academic adviser
- Involvement of a faculty member outside the
advisers academic unit - Involvement of outside professionals
- Work invested comparable to that of a 4-credit
graduate level course
4How this project meets the capstone goals
- Back pain is a common, often serious problem
- Public may have little understanding about how
much they can do vs. how much intervention is
needed - Project was published on the Web
- Project approved by academic adviser and reviewed
by faculty member outside the unit - Project reviewed by 5 outside professionals (4
Mayo Clinic doctors, 1 senior editor at
MayoClinic.com) - Work invested exceeded that comparable to a
4-credit graduate level course
5What are Health Decision Guides and their
characteristics?
- They address health conditions that are common
and potentially costly to treat - They address issues for which treatment options
are inconclusive - Patients must weigh risks and benefits in
choosing which option is best for them - Patients gain valuable knowledge to (a) better
communicate with their doctors and (b) make
informed decisions
6MayoClinic.coms other HDGs
7Examples of existing HDGs (1)
8Examples of existing HDGs (2)
9Examples of existing HDGs (3)
10What Have We Learned? Increased confidence in
ability to make informed treatment decision
11What Have We Learned?
12The concept ofShared Decision Making
- Rates of elective surgery and discretionary
intervention vary widely across U.S. - Medical paternalism has strong influence on
this trend - Lack of informed choices by patients contributes
to trend - A new model is emerging
- Patients are sharing in decisions with their
doctors - In shared decision making, the treatment choices
are not clear-cut - Shared decision making implies weighing of
complex trade-offs on a case-by-case basis
Source Dartmouth University
13Choosing HDG Topics
- Is there no gold standard treatment, test?
- Is the evidence inconclusive?
- Are there reasonable options?
- Must a patient ultimately weigh what risks they
can tolerate and what benefits they prefer? - Is it common and potentially costly?
- Are specialty M.D. resources available?
- Is the topic meaningful for our users/customers?
14Why is back pain so interesting?
- Extremely common
- Major impact on quality of life
- Major impact on the workplace
- Major costs to society
- The course of treatment is not clear
15How was this topic developed/timeline?
- Early 2004 Discussions with Gary Schwitzer and
MC.com about suitability of an HDG for the
capstone and which topic both sides OK - Summer 2004 Outline developed research begins
Dr. Vercellotti lined up as an adviser - Fall 2004 Writing begins recruitment of
personal story candidates initial review by Dr.
Vercellotti and reviewers at Mayo Clinic - Spring 2005 Completion of project final
reviews by Gary Schwitzer and at Mayo Clinic
online publication presentation at U of M
16Chronic nonspecific back pain Health Decision
Guide outline
- I. Welcome
- II. About chronic nonspecific back pain
- A. Anatomy of the spine
- B. Symptoms
- C. Common causes
- D. When the cause is unknown
- III. Treatment options
- A. Noninvasive treatments
- 1. Pros and cons
- B. Invasive treatments
- 1. Spinal fusion
- 2. Other invasive treatments
- 3. Pros and cons
- C. Complementary and alternative approaches
- D. Emerging therapies
- E. Watchful waiting
- IV. Meet the Mayo Clinic doctor
- V. Personal stories
- A. Meet Robert Moore
17Key advisers/professionals/1
- Academic adviser Gary Schwitzer, assistant
professor, SJMC gt - lt Faculty adviser from outside the unit Dr.
Gregory Vercellotti, senior associate dean,
Medical School Admin/Educ - Jay Maxwell, senior editor, MayoClinic.com gt
18Key advisers/professionals/2
- Dr. Randy Shelerud, Department of Physical
Medicine and Rehabilitation, Mayo Clinic Spine
Center gt - lt Dr. Ed Laskowski, PMR, Mayo Clinic Sports
Medicine Center - Dr. Brad Currier, orthopedic surgeon, Mayo Clinic
gt - lt Dr. Ken Berge, senior medical editor,
MayoClinic.com
19Where can you find this HDG now and in the
future?
- A look now (April 2005-April 2006)
https//secure.mayoclinic.com/login/login.cfm?wwwi
dMyMayoHealth.comimsecure1 - (password-protected site)
- A look in the future (April 2006)
- http//www.mayoclinic.com/health/back-pain-treatm
ent/BA99999 - (public site)
20Project screenshot (1)
21Project screenshot (2)
22Project screenshot (3)
23Project screenshot (4)
24Project screenshot (5)
25Personal profile candidates
- Ann Nolan. 30-something. Plainview, MN. Opted for
spinal fusion. gt - Robert Moore. 60-something. Vienna, VA. Opted for
multifaceted nonsurgical approach. gt - Candidates from among a small group suggested by
Dr. Shelerud. Request was made for as much
racial, age and sex diversity as possible.
26The primary medical reviewer
- Director, Spine Center, Mayo Clinic Rochester
- Consultant, Department of Physical Medicine and
Rehabilitation, Mayo Clinic Rochester - Instructor in Physical Medicine Rehab, Mayo
Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN
Dr. Randy Shelerud
27Challenges of project
- Reviewing a large amount of material
- Striking the right tone, balance
- Putting things in proper context
- Identifying suitable personal story candidates
- Identifying and creating artwork
- Writing so much material in a scannable,
approachable manner
28 And finally
- Your questions and comments