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Distance Management of Spinal Disorders During the COVID-19 Pandemic and Beyond: Evidence-Based Patient and Clinician Guides From the Global Spine Care Initiative.

Scott HaldemanMargareta C NordinPatricia TavaresRajani MullerpatanDeborah Kopansky-GilesVincent SetlhareRoger ChouEric L HurwitzCaroline TreanorJan HartvigsenMichael J SchneiderRalph GayJean MossJoan HaldemanDavid GryfeAdam WilkeyRichard BrownGeoff OuterbridgeStefan EberspaecherLinda CarrollReginald EngelbrechtKait GrahamNathan CashionStefanie InceErin Moon
Published in: JMIR public health and surveillance (2021)
The Patient and Clinician Guides are designed to be sufficiently clear to be useful to all patients and clinicians, irrespective of their location, education, professional qualifications, and experience. However, they are comprehensive enough to provide guidance on the management of all spine-related symptoms or disorders, including triage for serious and specific diseases. They are consistent with widely accepted evidence-based clinical practice guidelines. They also allow for adequate documentation and medical record keeping. These guides should be of value during periods of government-mandated physical or social distancing due to infectious diseases, such as during the COVID-19 pandemic. They should also be of value in underserved communities in high-, middle-, and low-income countries where there is a dearth of accessible trained spine care clinicians. These guides have the potential to reduce the overutilization of unnecessary and expensive interventions while empowering patients to self-manage uncomplicated spinal pain with the assistance of their clinician, either through direct in-person consultation or via telehealth communication.
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