I’m pleased to give you another guest blog this time from Lars Avemarie who isn’t afraid to question and challenge many things, including me, which can at times make him unpopular. As someone who is also unpopular for saying some things, Lars has done a blog on his most unpopular opinions. So without further ado, it’s over to Lars.
I hold many science-based opinions, but most of them are unpopular because they go against the old dogmatic views that are within the pain management and physiotherapy profession.
As noted by Barradell 2017 physiotherapy (like other industries) has a tendency to be tied to specific ways of seeing the world and these are passed down from old generations of physiotherapists to new physiotherapy graduates. This dogmatic way of training and teaching is one of the major reasons that is holding the physiotherapy profession back from taking a more modern and science-based view of pain management.
It is like we look at the horizon through binoculars, only focusing on a small part of it, making us blind to all the other things we could discover. We are putting our head in the sand to the last 30 years of research, for example, research that has shown us that there are many factors influencing pain and that pain is a multi-factorial experience.
The real losers in this sad situation are our clients. Because when we choose to only focus on one single point on the horizon we are choosing to be blind to all of the other possible solutions for our patient’s problem.
Here are my 20 unpopular opinions:
No 1 – Pain is modulated by emotional, mental, and sensory mechanisms, and our treatments should reflect this.
No 2 – Most health professionals lack a comprehensive scientific perspective on pain, and are often scientific illiterate.
No 3 – Often it is our education tradition and historical continuity that maintains most assumptions about what we do and learn, it is not the repeated assessment of the validity of these assumptions (adapted from Edward DeBono)
No 4 – The ‘toolbox’ approach to pain management does not provide optimal treatment and typically its results rely on non-plausible and non-scientific therapeutic modalities.
No 5 – A barrier to a more scientific approach to pain management is the old dogmatic way of viewing the body that is still being taught to health professionals, these ways are passed down to new generations from the past generations.
No 6 – Pain is a multidimensional experience produced by multiple influences, and our treatments should reflect this.
No 7 – Pain management is suboptimal when done with a purely biomedical ideology.
No 8 – Pain (both acute or chronic) is always a biopsychosocial experience and will, therefore, be influenced by patient’s goals, beliefs, experiences and predictions, our treatments should reflect this (thanks, Dr Bronnie Lennox Thompson for that one).
No 9 – Pain felt in the body is not a “thing” but many therapeutic modalities have conceptualised pain as something in the body like a kidney or a patella. Pain is not a somatic entity. This erroneous belief leads the therapist to try and attack this “thing” called pain forgetting that it is an experience.
This is like going to Norway and viewing aurora borealis (an experience) to staying at home trying to find aurora in your own knee. (Thanks to Dr John Quintner for that one).
No 10 – Health professionals talk a lot about the quality of care and making healthcare better for the future. However, you don’t increase quality by saying “yes” all the time and being overly positive towards every type of treatment, part of getting higher quality care is by saying NO to low-quality treatments.
No 11 – It is often assumed that an error in a movement will cause an injury, tissue damage and/or pain. But most health professionals forget the specificity principle, and that an adaptation could also be a result of this.
No 12 – A problem in pain management right now, is that there is an epidemic of bad reasoning. This is a pandemic of “broscience” and non-scientific thinking and dysrationalia. In debates, when people are faced with an argument and/or evidence that goes against their belief, the common answer is “but I know it works”, or “I have seen it work”.
No 13 – Structure and biomechanics are not destiny, most findings on imaging are also common in asymptomatic individuals.
No 14 – Finding “errors” in people like bad posture, tilted pelvises, weak cores, sacroiliac joints “out”, “tight” muscles, imbalances, faulty movement patterns or any other bio-“mechanical” problems are not single causal factors for pain, and are also common in people without pain.
No 15 – Human movement and the human body exhibit unique individual characteristics much like fingerprints. Finding “errors” in gait, running, and movement is problematic due to the high variability. This puts a big hole in the theory about assessment, it is very difficult to know what is a “dysfunction” (hate that word) or a normal variation.
No 16 – Personal anecdotes and “clinical experience” are unreliable and therefore we cannot make any reliable and sound assumptions based upon them.
No 17 – I’ve seen it “work” is not an argument a health professional that provides care for another human being should make, we have to do better, “With great power comes great responsibility.”
No 18 – The placebo effect does not justify “magical” pseudo-scientific non-plausible treatments with only dubious evidence.
No 19 – Most advice on ergonomic sitting (and to some degree lifting) is based on old data, and makes the faulty assumption that “stress” leads to injury or pain. This assumption goes against the S.A.I.D principle. People will adapt to increased load like a deadlift, but then to say this does not apply to sitting with their head a little bit forward is just not logical.
No 20 – Psychological factors like depression, fear-avoidance or pain-related fear are often more important to the influence and development of chronic pain than most biomechanical or biomedical factors.
Thanks to Brian Rutledge for the idea of this post.
About Lars
Lars Avemarie is a personal trainer and 3rd-year physiotherapy student. Lars has a unique blend of knowledge about pain science, neuroscience, physiotherapy, evidence-based practice, exercise science, rehabilitation, sleep research and critical thinking. He has worked almost a decade full-time in the healthcare industry. He has specialised in the training of clients with injuries and chronic pain.
Number 21. Pointing out when physios or other therapists are plying bullshit treatments is a public service, not a “discredit to the profession”. Fantastic blog
Hi
Thank’s for this summary of pain science and for the insight of the way to treat our patients.
Can’t be repeated enough.
Sven
@physiosweden
With No 4 – The ‘toolbox’ approach to pain management does not provide optimal treatment and typically its results rely on non-plausible and non-scientific therapeutic modalities.
Can you please explain a bit more about it?
If we are aware of the psychological effect on pain, would this statement changed?
Reblogged this on Physical Therapy Reviewer and commented:
” No 10 – Health professionals talk a lot about the quality of care and making healthcare better for the future. However, you don’t increase quality by saying “yes” all the time and being overly positive towards every type of treatment, part of getting higher quality care is by saying NO to low-quality treatments”
Bingo!
Hi Lars
I share many of you’re the opinions / thought’s you present in this “guest-blog” (and in general)…
Though – I had a few thoughts after reading your post….
Opinion No 2 – Most health professionals lack a comprehensive scientific perspective on pain, and are often scientific illiterate…
Is this opinion based on science / data or is it just your own opinion / experience??
I’m aware of the data supporting your claim about health professionals lacking knowledge about pain.
-But, are you aware of data supporting that MOST health professionals lacks knowledge about pain AND that they are scientific illiterate?
Opinion No 4 – The ‘toolbox’ approach to pain management does not provide optimal treatment and typically its results rely on non-plausible and non-scientific therapeutic modalities.
Doesn’t that depend on;
– what you mean by /how you define a toolbox”
– “what’s in the toolbox?
– ….and on which ‘processes’ (clinical reasoning) you use when selecting the different “tools”..?
Opinion No 12 – A problem in pain management right now, is that there is an epidemic of bad reasoning. This is a pandemic of “broscience” and non-scientific thinking and dysrationalia. In debates, when people are faced with an argument and/or evidence that goes against their belief, the common answer is “but I know it works”, or “I have seen it work”.
Agree…! I tend to see a lot of bro-science…. And tribalism / echo chambers as well. Also in various *Pain Science* groups/network on SoMe….
Opinion No 14 – Finding “errors” in people like bad posture, tilted pelvises, weak cores, sacroiliac joints “out”, “tight” muscles, imbalances, faulty movement patterns or any other bio-“mechanical” problems are not single causal factors for pain, and are also common in people without pain.
Agree (very much).. Though… Could it be, that eg “posture” or “movement strategies” in some patients (persons with MSK symptoms) could be “”related” to the symptoms…? As part of a BPS and multidimensional “condition”?
Opinion No 16 – Personal anecdotes and “clinical experience” are unreliable and therefore we cannot make any reliable and sound assumptions based upon them.
I’m probably prefer Prof. D. Sackett and his group’s view on “EBM”
https://www.cebma.org/wp-content/uploads/Sackett-Evidence-Based-Medicine.pdf
Evidence based medicine is the conscientious, explicit, and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients. The practice of evidence basedmedicine means integrating individual clinical expertise with the best available external clinical evidence from systematic research. By individual clinical expertise we mean the proficiency and judgment that individual clinicians acquire through clinical experience and clinical practice. Increased expertise is reflectedin many ways, but especially in more effective and efficient diagnosis and in the more thoughtful identification and compassionate use of individual patients’ predicaments, rights, and preferences in making clinical decisions about their care.
Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn’t.
David L Sackett et al – Editorial BMJ 1996;312:71-72 (13 January)
Opinion No 21 (suggestion)
Many (probably literate) health professionals claims to be 100% Evidence based and refuses to let “clinical experience” and “critical reflection” influence their practice..
Thanks for your work and opinions / input Lars.
Again – As I started – I do agree on most of the stuff you write in this guest blog.
Best Regards
Jeppe