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Systematic review of digital health interventions to support self-management of low back pain in the workplace

Systematic review of digital health interventions to support self-management of low back pain in the workplace
Systematic review of digital health interventions to support self-management of low back pain in the workplace
Background
Low back pain (LBP) is a prevalent condition in working populations, imposing significant individual, organisational, and societal burdens, including reduced quality of life, impaired work performance, and high healthcare costs. Digital health interventions (DHIs) offer scalable solutions for self-managing LBP in workplace settings, yet their tailoring, integration, and effectiveness remain unclear.
Objective
This systematic review evaluates the effectiveness of DHIs in supporting LBP self-management in workplace environments. It examines intervention components, tailoring methods, integration with occupational health (OH) pathways, and their impact on clinical and work-related outcomes.
Methods
A systematic search was conducted across PubMed, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, the Cochrane Library, and Web of Science, following PRISMA guidelines. Randomised controlled trials evaluating DHIs for workplace LBP were included. Data extraction focused on intervention characteristics, tailoring approaches, and primary outcomes, including pain intensity, disability, and physical performance. The quality of evidence was assessed using the Cochrane risk-of-bias and GRADE frameworks.
Results
Five studies were included, featuring DHIs delivered via web-based platforms or mobile applications. Interventions incorporated exercise, ergonomics education, and work activity modification. Only one study used a tailored approach based on theoretical frameworks and individualised work classifications. Moderate-quality evidence supported improvements in pain, disability, and physical performance, but effects on quality of life, psychosocial factors, and work outcomes were inconsistent. Integration with occupational health pathways was absent in all studies.
Conclusions
The lack of tailoring and integration within occupational health systems limits the scalability and impact of DHIs for workplace LBP. Future research should focus on personalised, theory-driven interventions and systemic alignment with occupational health policies to enhance their feasibility, implementation, and long-term outcomes.
Low back pain, digital health, self-management, tailored approaches, workplace interventions
2055-2076
Chen, Minghao
d5fa1113-e5b7-4492-a11c-633867955ea6
Sparkes, Valerie
7ddd0ce0-29db-4fdf-8a6c-140352979eb6
Sheeran, Liba
ad753e79-56c8-483f-aae5-dd992496bee2
Chen, Minghao
d5fa1113-e5b7-4492-a11c-633867955ea6
Sparkes, Valerie
7ddd0ce0-29db-4fdf-8a6c-140352979eb6
Sheeran, Liba
ad753e79-56c8-483f-aae5-dd992496bee2

Chen, Minghao, Sparkes, Valerie and Sheeran, Liba (2025) Systematic review of digital health interventions to support self-management of low back pain in the workplace. Digital Health, 11, [20552076251336281]. (doi:10.1177/20552076251336281).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Background
Low back pain (LBP) is a prevalent condition in working populations, imposing significant individual, organisational, and societal burdens, including reduced quality of life, impaired work performance, and high healthcare costs. Digital health interventions (DHIs) offer scalable solutions for self-managing LBP in workplace settings, yet their tailoring, integration, and effectiveness remain unclear.
Objective
This systematic review evaluates the effectiveness of DHIs in supporting LBP self-management in workplace environments. It examines intervention components, tailoring methods, integration with occupational health (OH) pathways, and their impact on clinical and work-related outcomes.
Methods
A systematic search was conducted across PubMed, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, the Cochrane Library, and Web of Science, following PRISMA guidelines. Randomised controlled trials evaluating DHIs for workplace LBP were included. Data extraction focused on intervention characteristics, tailoring approaches, and primary outcomes, including pain intensity, disability, and physical performance. The quality of evidence was assessed using the Cochrane risk-of-bias and GRADE frameworks.
Results
Five studies were included, featuring DHIs delivered via web-based platforms or mobile applications. Interventions incorporated exercise, ergonomics education, and work activity modification. Only one study used a tailored approach based on theoretical frameworks and individualised work classifications. Moderate-quality evidence supported improvements in pain, disability, and physical performance, but effects on quality of life, psychosocial factors, and work outcomes were inconsistent. Integration with occupational health pathways was absent in all studies.
Conclusions
The lack of tailoring and integration within occupational health systems limits the scalability and impact of DHIs for workplace LBP. Future research should focus on personalised, theory-driven interventions and systemic alignment with occupational health policies to enhance their feasibility, implementation, and long-term outcomes.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 4 April 2025
Published date: 26 May 2025
Keywords: Low back pain, digital health, self-management, tailored approaches, workplace interventions

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 501574
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501574
ISSN: 2055-2076
PURE UUID: e5c4057b-fc2a-46f1-8a52-9b56ba2a7760
ORCID for Liba Sheeran: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1502-764X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 03 Jun 2025 17:13
Last modified: 02 Oct 2025 02:18

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Contributors

Author: Minghao Chen
Author: Valerie Sparkes
Author: Liba Sheeran ORCID iD

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