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Treatment Beliefs Underlying Intended Treatment Choices in Knee and Hip Osteoarthritis
Authors:Ellen M. H. Selten  Rinie Geenen  Henk J. Schers  Frank H. J. van den Hoogen  Roelien G. van der Meulen-Dilling  Willemijn H. van der Laan  Marc W. Nijhof  Cornelia H. M. van den Ende  Johanna E. Vriezekolk
Affiliation:1.Department of Rheumatology,Sint Maartenskliniek,Nijmegen,The Netherlands;2.Department of Psychology,Utrecht University,Utrecht,The Netherlands;3.Department of Primary and Community Care,Radboud University Medical Center,Nijmegen,The Netherlands;4.Department of Rheumatology,Radboud University Medical Center,Nijmegen,The Netherlands;5.Physical Therapy and Manual Therapy Partnership Velperweg,Arnhem,The Netherlands;6.Department of Rheumatology,Sint Maartenskliniek,Woerden,The Netherlands;7.Department of Orthopedics,Sint Maartenskliniek,Nijmegen,The Netherlands
Abstract:

Purpose

Patients’ beliefs about treatment modalities for knee and hip osteoarthritis (OA) will underlie their treatment choices. Based on the Theory of Planned Behavior, it is hypothesized that patients’ beliefs, subjective norm, and perceived behavioral control guide their treatment choices. Also, symptom severity and one’s inherent tendency to approach or avoid situations are assumed to play a role. The objective of this study was to test whether these variables were associated with intended treatment choices in knee and hip OA.

Methods

Patients with knee and hip OA were randomly selected from hospital patient records. They completed the Treatment beliefs in OsteoArthritis questionnaire to assess positive and negative treatment beliefs regarding five treatment modalities: physical activities, pain medication, physiotherapy, injections, and arthroplasty. Other measures were intention, subjective norm, perceived behavioral control (ASES), symptom severity (WOMAC), and the person’s general tendency to approach or avoid situations (RR/BIS scales). Three models were tested using path analyses to examine the hypothesized associations.

Results

Participants were 289 patients. Positive treatment beliefs and subjective norm were consistently associated with intended treatment choice across all treatment modalities. Negative treatment beliefs were associated with intended treatment choices for pain medication and arthroplasty. Other associations were not significant.

Conclusions

This is the first study testing the Theory of Planned Behavior in the context of treatment choices in OA. Findings suggest that foremost positive beliefs about treatment modalities and the norms of one’s social environment guide a specific treatment choice. Unexpectedly, symptom severity was not related to intended treatment choices.
Keywords:
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