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An evaluation of a one-day pain science education event in a 16–18 years school setting targeting pain-related beliefs, knowledge, and behavioural intentions: A mixed-methods, non-randomised controlled trial

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posted on 2025-08-05, 14:39 authored by J Mankelow, CG Ryan, N Skidmore, J Potter, D Ravindran, R Chattle, S Browne, S Suri, A Graham, JW Pate, Roger NewportRoger Newport, T Langford, D Martin
<p dir="ltr">Background: Public understanding of persistent pain is fraught with misconceptions. Pain education in schools may improve public understanding long-term. This study evaluated the impact of a one-day Pain Science Education (PSE) public health event delivered in a 16–18 year old school setting. </p><p dir="ltr">Methods: This was a multi-site, non-randomised controlled, mixed-methods study with three data collection time points: baseline, post intervention, and three-month follow-up. Participants were high school students ≥16 years old. Pain beliefs, knowledge, and behavioural intentions were assessed with the Pain Beliefs Questionnaire (PBQ [organic and psychological subscales]), Concepts of Pain Inventory (COPI-Adult), a case vignette, and reflexive thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews. </p><p dir="ltr">Results: Thirty intervention (mean age 16.6 years, 37 % female, 63 % male) and 24 control group participants (16.9 years, 63 % female, 37 % male) were recruited. Attending the pain education event was associated with reductions in Organic Beliefs [mean difference −4.4 (95 % CI, −6.0, −1.9)] and increases in Psychological Beliefs [4.6 (2.7, 6.4)] compared to the control group. This represents a shift away from biomedical beliefs in the intervention group compared to the control group. This shift was partially sustained at 3 months. A similar pattern was seen for the COPI-Adult and case vignette assessments. Semi-structured interviews (n = 13) identified an increased awareness of chronic pain and varying degrees of reconceptualisation of pain towards a biopsychosocial understanding. </p><p dir="ltr">Conclusions: Attendance at a one-day PSE-based public health event was associated with improved knowledge, beliefs, and behavioural intentions regarding persistent pain. This exploratory study supports the need for a robust mixed-methods RCT of pain education for school children with long-term follow-up.</p>

Funding

NIHR Applied Research Collaboration - North East and North Cumbria (ARC NENC)

National Institute for Health Research

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History

School

  • Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences

Published in

Musculoskeletal Science and Practice

Volume

79

Issue

2025

Publisher

Elsevier

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The Authors

Publisher statement

This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/bync- nd/4.0/ ).

Acceptance date

2025-07-02

Publication date

2025-07-03

Copyright date

2025

ISSN

2468-8630

eISSN

2468-7812

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Roger Newport. Deposit date: 28 July 2025

Article number

103385

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