Audrey Long
American Physical Therapy Association
13 Papers
89 Citations
Audrey Long is an academic researcher from American Physical Therapy Association. The author has contributed to research in topics: Low back pain & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 13 publications. Previous affiliations of Audrey Long include Sheffield Hallam University.
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Papers
Consensus on Exercise Reporting Template (CERT): Modified Delphi Study
Susan C Slade,Clermont E. Dionne,Martin Underwood,Rachelle Buchbinder,Belinda R. Beck,Kim L Bennell,Lucie Brosseau,Leonardo Oliveira Pena Costa,Fiona Cramp,Edith H. C. Cup,Lynne M. Feehan,Manuela L. Ferreira,Scott C. Forbes,Paul Glasziou,Bas Habets,Susan R. Harris,Jean Hay-Smith,Susan Hillier,Rana S Hinman,Ann Holland,Maria Hondras,George Kelly,Peter Kent,Gert-Jan Lauret,Audrey Long,Christopher G. Maher,Lars Morsø,Nina Østerås,Tom Peterson,Ros Quinlivan,Karen Rees,Jean-Philippe Regnaux,Marc B. Rietberg,Dave Saunders,Nicole Skoetz,Karen Søgaard,Tim Takken,Maurits W. van Tulder,Nicoline B M Voet,Lesley Ward,Claire White +40 more
TL;DR: The CERT, a 16-item checklist developed by an international panel of exercise experts, is designed to improve the reporting of exercise programs in all evaluative study designs and contains 7 categories: materials, provider, delivery, location, dosage, tailoring, and compliance.
The centralization phenomenon. Its usefulness as a predictor or outcome in conservative treatment of chronic law back pain (a pilot study).
TL;DR: Centrelization can help identify subgroups within the population with chronic low backPain and could be a useful goal setting and case management toll in the rehabilitation of low back pain.
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Exercise treatment effect modifiers in persistent low back pain: an individual participant data meta-analysis of 3514 participants from 27 randomised controlled trials
Jill A. Hayden,Maria N. Wilson,Samuel A. Stewart,Jennifer Cartwright,Andrea Smith,Richard D Riley,Maurits W. van Tulder,Tom Bendix,Francesca Cecchi,Leonardo Oliveira Pena Costa,Ninna Dufour,Manuela L. Ferreira,Manuela L. Ferreira,Nadine E. Foster,Maruti R Gudavalli,Jan Hartvigsen,Pieter H. Helmhout,Jan Kool,George A. Koumantakis,Francisco M. Kovacs,Tiina Kuukkanen,Audrey Long,Luciana G. Macedo,Luciana A. C. Machado,Christopher G. Maher,Wolf E. Mehling,Giovanni Morone,Tom Peterson,Eva Rasmussen-Barr,Cormac Ryan,Tuulikki Sjögren,Rob J. E. M. Smeets,J. Bart Staal,Monica Unsgaard-Tøndel,Henry Wajswelner,Ella W. Yeung +35 more
TL;DR: Not having heavy physical demands at work and medication use for low back pain were potential treatment effect modifiers—these were associated with superior exercise outcomes relative to non-exercise comparisons.
Specific directional exercises for patients with low back pain: a case series.
Audrey Long,Stephen May,Tak Fung +2 more
TL;DR: Poor outcomes from non-specific/unmatched exercise protocols appeared to reverse when patients with directional preference were given sub-group-matched, direction-specific exercises.
The Comparative Prognostic Value of Directional Preference and Centralization: A Useful Tool for Front-Line Clinicians?
Audrey Long,Stephen May,Tak Fung +2 more
TL;DR: Leg pain, work status, depression, pain location, chronicity, and treatment assignment were significant predictors of outcome in univariate analysis and only leg bothersomeness rating and treatment assignments survived multivariate analysis.