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Global burden of low back pain -- a consequence of negligence and misinformation

03.21.18 | Monash University

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A series of groundbreaking papers from Australian and international researchers in The Lancet , published today (22/3) warns that low back pain is a major health burden globally - across developed and developing nations - and that the current use of X-rays and scans, opioids, injections and surgery to investigate and treat the condition is useless, unnecessary and harmful.

Low back pain is the leading cause of disability globally - with more than 540 million people affected by activity-limiting low back pain at any one time. The burden from low back pain has doubled in the last 25 years, and the prevalence of the condition is expected to continue to increase with an aging and increasingly obese population.

According to three papers in today's Lancet, from an international team of experts led by Melbourne, Australia's Monash University researcher, Professor Rachelle Buchbinder, the burden from low back pain has reached a tipping point where the condition is growing rapidly, is poorly understood and is being mismanaged medically - at cost both to the patient and to the healthcare system. Low- and middle- income countries are already emulating the low-value care that is endemic in high-income countries.

The international team behind the series come from Australia, the UK, the US, Denmark, The Netherlands, Canada, Switzerland, Finland, Sweden, Brazil, South Africa and Germany.

Two of the three papers outline the breadth and impact of low back pain globally, how medical care is making the problem worse in both developed and developing countries, and promising solutions that need testing. The final paper in the series, by lead author Professor Buchbinder, is a Worldwide Urgent Global Call to Action.

The Call to Action seeks:

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Media Contact: Tania Ewing, 61 4083783422 taniaewing@taniaewing.com

The Lancet

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APA:
Monash University. (2018, March 21). Global burden of low back pain -- a consequence of negligence and misinformation. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L7635X41/global-burden-of-low-back-pain-a-consequence-of-negligence-and-misinformation.html
MLA:
"Global burden of low back pain -- a consequence of negligence and misinformation." Brightsurf News, Mar. 21 2018, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L7635X41/global-burden-of-low-back-pain-a-consequence-of-negligence-and-misinformation.html.