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Wednesday 22 February 2012

Teachers at risk of pain!

Teachers are at particular risk of developing musculoskeletal disorders (MSD) such as neck, back and shoulder pains, new research has revealed. 


A report from the British Osteopathic Association found that there was a high prevalence of teachers reporting problems such as a pain in the back, neck and upper limbs and believes this is due to the stressful working conditions, large class sizes and lack of resources faced by teachers. 


"Psychosocial factors have also been positively associated with MSD among school teachers, and the current review suggest that psychosocial factors such as high workload / demands, high perceived stress level, low social support, low job control, low job satisfaction and monotonous work are most likely associated with MSD among school teachers," the report reads. 


The research revealed that nursery school teachers are more likely to suffer from lower back pain due to the time spent on tasks which involve sustained periods of kneeling, stooping, squatting or bending. School teachers spend a significant amount of time in a 'head down' posture such as reading, marking assignments on writing on a whiteboard, so are most likely to suffer from a wider variety of problems including pain in the back, neck and upper limbs. 


According to the latest figures from the Labour Force Survey 2010-2011, musculoskeletal disorders were responsible for 15 sick days per case. "Physical stress imposed on the body by protracted periods of poor posture, sitting on chairs designed for children not adults etc. will produce muscle and joint imbalances, strains and soft tissue stresses which become habitual leading to more chronic recurring pains and episodes of pain," says Osteopath Kelston Chorley, Head of Professional Development at the British Osteopathic Association. "It is the chronic build up of strain and habitual bad posture that leads to many of the problems that osteopaths frequently see related to the teaching profession - particularly towards end of term. Osteopathy, as recommended by NICE guidance for low back pain, can have a very beneficial outcome both in the acute period of pain but more importantly, preventing the acute episode from turning into a chronic condition". 


Earlier this year, 96 per cent of teachers who responded to a Teacher Support Network e-newsletter survey said their health and wellbeing had been affected by their workload. 


"I have chronic neck pain which is mostly ignored or laughed at at work. I have to beg people to help me do things, which is humiliating at the very least," explained one respondent at the time. 


"I have constant exhaustion, forgetfulness, sore throats, aching body every day," added another. 


Are you struggling with back, neck or shoulder pains at school? 


Here are some helpful tips for teachers from the British Osteopathic Association:  


Health tips for teachers 


The main problem for primary and nursery teachers is that they are stuck in static postures and need to move their bodies around. With teachers of older children the problem tends to be stress. Both make the body stiff and tense. The following exercises done at the end of every working day will help teachers to combat the daily strains on their bodies from working in a physically strained environment. 

  • To loosen your neck, turn it slowly and gently from side to side ten times
  • To relax tense shoulders, roll them 15 to 20 times. 
  • Lie on your back on the floor and bring your knees to your chest, hug them, then release your arms while keeping you legs in the same position. Twist your legs gently across the left of your body, hold for a few seconds. Bring back to the middle then twist your legs over to the right. Release your legs back to full extension on the floor. Repeat this 15 times. 
  • Regular exercise such as swimming - anything to get the whole body moving 
  • Start an after-school exercise club for teachers! 
Download the British Osteopathic Association's free app which has video exercises individuals can follow to loosen their neck, back and shoulders:

iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/osteopathy/id427802141?mt=8&ls=1

Android: https://market.android.com/details?id=com.oakley.osteopathy

Want to try Osteopathy?

Absolute Health clinic in south Leicester is offering a free consultation and initial treatment to any teacher in the area.  

When you book 3 treatment sessions in advance you only pay for 2. Save £46!

Offer applies to new patients only.  Payment by cheque, debit card or cash - book in clinic or over the phone - 0116 282 7766.
Offer ends 31st October 2012.
  

Osteopathy helps headache and migraine


Is osteopathic manipulation effective for headaches?

Ashley C. Keays, DO, MPH; Jon O. Neher, MD;
Valley Family Medicine, Renton, Wash
Sarah Safranek, MLIS
Health Sciences Library, University of Washington, Seattle
Evidence-based answer
It can be. Spinal manipulative therapy (SMT), a component of osteopathy, has been shown to be variably effective for the treatment of headaches. For the prophylactic treatment of cervicogenic headaches and for acute tension headaches, SMT is superior to placebo.
For tension headache prophylaxis, research shows a trend toward better outcomes with amitriptyline than with SMT. For migraine prophylaxis, SMT has an effect similar to amitriptyline (strength of recommendation: B, based on a systematic review of various quality studies).
Clinical commentary
3 osteopathic techniques that work for my patients
Charles Webb, DO
Oregon Health and Science University, Portland
Headaches often have more than one cause—physical, psychological, and pharmacological—and each requires treatment. I start by systematically eliminating specific headache triggers. Meanwhile, I find osteopathic manipulative treatment to be an easy and timely intervention to abort headache symptoms and improve patient well-being. I use a variety of manipulation techniques, including cervical soft tissue massage, occipital decompression, and myofascial unwinding.
  1. Cervical soft tissue massage of the paraspinal tissues helps relieve the spasms of tension headaches.
  2. Occipital decompression involves using the fingertips to manually stretch the paraspinal tissues at the base of the occiput; it works well in my experience to abort migraine headaches. I teach patients to use a rolled up hand towel behind their neck to do occipital decompression at home, which helps prevent further headaches.
  3. Myofascial unwinding is a technique that literally unwinds the tissues encasing muscles in spasm.

  EVIDENCE SUMMARY

For cervicogenic headaches: Spinal manipulative therapy reduces pain
Three studies1 evaluated SMT for treatment of recurrent cervicogenic headaches). A multicenter trial2randomized 200 patients with cervicogenic headaches to either SMT (8–12 sessions over 6 weeks) or placebo. The SMT group had significantly reduced pain (at 1 week, effect size [ES]=0.7; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.3–1.2; and at 12 months, ES=0.4; 95% CI, 0.0–0.8) and fewer headaches (ES=0.7; 95% CI, 0.3–1.1 at both time points) than placebo.
FAST TRACK
Spinal manipulative therapy reduces the pain of cervicogenic headaches
Another RCT3 with 105 patients compared SMT (3 times a week for 3 weeks) with placebo. The SMT group reported significantly less pain after 3 weeks (ES=2.2; 95% CI, 1.7–2.7).
A third trial4 randomized 30 patients to either SMT, mobilization (small oscillatory movements to a joint within its normal range), or wait-list placement. At the end of treatment, there was a nonsignificant trend toward greater pain reduction in patients receiving SMT than either those receiving mobilization (ES=0.4; 95% CI, –0.5 to 1.4) or those on the wait list (ES=0.6; 95% CI, –0.4 to 1.5).
For tension-type headaches: Results are mixed
Two trials5 investigated the efficacy of SMT on tension-type headaches. The first, an RCT with 150 patients with recurrent headaches, compared SMT (2 sessions per week) with amitriptyline (10 mg daily week 1, 20 mg daily week 2, then 30 mg daily) for 6 weeks. At the end of 6 weeks, the SMT group reported a nonsignificant trend toward more headache pain (ES for SMT vs amitriptyline= –0.4; 95% CI, –0.8 to 0.0), but fewer side effects. They had similar headache frequency and medication use.
Another study6 of 22 patients compared SMT with 2 different controls (palpation and rest) for acute tension-type headache. The SMT group was significantly more likely to experience immediate improvement (ES=1.8; 95% CI, 0.4–3.2).
For migraine: Spinal manipulative therapy is similar to amitriptyline
In 1 trial7 of migraine prophylaxis, 218 patients were randomized to either 14 sessions of SMT for 2 months or oral amitriptyline (titrated up weekly during the first month and continued at 100 mg daily over the second month). The headache index (a measure of daily pain intensity) was equivalent in both groups in the last 4 weeks of treatment (ES for SMT vs amitriptyline= –0.1; 95% CI, –0.5 to 0.3).
A month after both therapies were stopped, there was a nonsignificant trend toward a lower headache index in the group that had received SMT than the group that had received amitriptyline (ES=0.4; 95% CI, 0.0–0.8). Ten percent of the medication group withdrew from this study due to side effects; no side effects were reported from SMT.7
Another RCT8 of migraine prophylaxis with 88 patients compared SMT twice weekly for 8 weeks with mobilization techniques. At 8 weeks post-treatment, there was a nonsignificant trend favoring SMT over mobilization in decreasing pain (ES=0.4; 95% CI, –0.2 to 1.0).
Recommendations from others
FAST TRACK
For migraine, spinal manipulative therapy is as effective as amitriptyline
The National Headache Foundation9 states that “the value and cost-effectiveness of chiropractic, osteopathic medicine, and physical therapy in migraine have not been proven in clinical trials. Conflicting results and poor clinical trial design limit the ability to judge the effectiveness of manipulative treatments. Physical therapy, although limited in its study, has proven more effective than manipulative treatment in selective cases.”
    References
  1. Biondi DMCervicogenic headache: a review of diagnostic and treatment strategies. J Am Osteopath Assoc 2005;105(4 Suppl 2):16S–22S.
  2. Jull G, Trott P, Potter H, et al. A randomized controlled trial of exercise and manipulative therapy for cervicogenic headache. Spine 2002;27:1835–1843.
  3. Whittingham W The efficacy of cervical adjustments (toggle recoil) for chronic cervicogenic headaches [PhD dissertation]. Melbourne, Australia: Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology; 1997.
  4. Bronfort G, Nilsson N, Hass M, et al. Non-invasive physical treatments for chronic/recurrent headache. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2004;(3):CD001878.
  5. Boline PD, Kassak K, Bronfort G, Nelson C, Anderson AVSpinal manipulation vs. Amitriptyline for the treatment of chronic tension-type headaches: a randomized clinical trial. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 1995;18:148–154.
  6. Hoyt WH, Shaffer F, Bard DA, et al. Osteopathic manipulation in the treatment of muscle-contraction headache. J Am Osteopath Assoc 1979;78:322–325.
  7. Nelson CF, Bronfort G, Evans R, Boline P, Goldsmith C, Anderson AVThe efficacy of spinal manipulation, amitriptyline and the combination of both therapies for the prophylaxis of migraine headache. J Manipulative Physiol Ther 1998;21:511–519.
  8. Parker GB, Pryor DS, Tupling HWhy does migraine improve during a clinical trial? Further results from a trial of cervical manipulation for migraine. Aust N Z J Med 1980;10:192–198.
  9. Mauskop A, Graff-Radford SSpecial treatment situations: alternative headache treatments. In: Standards of Care for Headache Diagnosis and Treatment.Chicago, IL: National Headache Foundation; 2004;115–122.
March 2008 · Vol. 57, No. 3: 190-091