Assessing the readiness and feasibility to implement a model of care for spine disorders and related disability in Cross Lake, an Indigenous community in northern Manitoba, Canada: a research protocol DOI Creative Commons
André Bussières, Steven Passmore, Deborah Kopansky-Giles

et al.

Chiropractic & Manual Therapies, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 33(1)

Published: March 13, 2025

Abstract Background Since the 1990s, spine disorders have remained leading cause of global disability, disproportionately affecting economically marginalized individuals, rural populations, women, and older people. Back pain related disability is projected to increase most in remote regions where lifestyle work are increasingly sedentary, yet resources access comprehensive healthcare generally limited. To help tackle this worldwide health problem, World Spine Care Canada, Global Initiative (GSCI) launched a four-phase project aiming address profound gap between evidence-based care routine delivered people with symptoms or concerns communities that medically underserved. Phase 1 conclusions recommendations led development model included triaging system pathways could be implemented scaled underserved around world. Methods The current research protocol describes site-specific customization pre-implementation study (Phase 2), as well feasibility 3) conducted Cross Lake, an Indigenous community northern Manitoba, Canada. Design: Observational pre-post design using participatory mixed-methods approach. Relationship building established through regular site visits will enable pre- post-implementation data collection about provisionally selected implementation strategies survey, chart reviews, qualitative interviews, adoption surveys key partners at meso (community leaders) micro (clinicians, patients, residents) levels. Recruitment started March 2023 end 2026. Surveys analyzed descriptively interviews thematically. Findings inform co-tailoring support prior evaluating new program. Discussion Knowledge generated from provide essential guidance for scaling up, sustainability impact 4) other Canada sites globe. It hoped implementing GSCI Lake reduce burden problems costs local community, serve scalable programs settings.

Language: Английский

Assessing the readiness and feasibility to implement a model of care for spine disorders and related disability in Cross Lake, an Indigenous community in northern Manitoba, Canada: a research protocol DOI Creative Commons
André Bussières, Steven Passmore, Deborah Kopansky-Giles

et al.

Chiropractic & Manual Therapies, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 33(1)

Published: March 13, 2025

Abstract Background Since the 1990s, spine disorders have remained leading cause of global disability, disproportionately affecting economically marginalized individuals, rural populations, women, and older people. Back pain related disability is projected to increase most in remote regions where lifestyle work are increasingly sedentary, yet resources access comprehensive healthcare generally limited. To help tackle this worldwide health problem, World Spine Care Canada, Global Initiative (GSCI) launched a four-phase project aiming address profound gap between evidence-based care routine delivered people with symptoms or concerns communities that medically underserved. Phase 1 conclusions recommendations led development model included triaging system pathways could be implemented scaled underserved around world. Methods The current research protocol describes site-specific customization pre-implementation study (Phase 2), as well feasibility 3) conducted Cross Lake, an Indigenous community northern Manitoba, Canada. Design: Observational pre-post design using participatory mixed-methods approach. Relationship building established through regular site visits will enable pre- post-implementation data collection about provisionally selected implementation strategies survey, chart reviews, qualitative interviews, adoption surveys key partners at meso (community leaders) micro (clinicians, patients, residents) levels. Recruitment started March 2023 end 2026. Surveys analyzed descriptively interviews thematically. Findings inform co-tailoring support prior evaluating new program. Discussion Knowledge generated from provide essential guidance for scaling up, sustainability impact 4) other Canada sites globe. It hoped implementing GSCI Lake reduce burden problems costs local community, serve scalable programs settings.

Language: Английский

Citations

0