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Understanding internet-supported self-management for low back pain in primary care: a qualitative process evaluation of the SupportBack 2 randomised controlled trial

Understanding internet-supported self-management for low back pain in primary care: a qualitative process evaluation of the SupportBack 2 randomised controlled trial
Understanding internet-supported self-management for low back pain in primary care: a qualitative process evaluation of the SupportBack 2 randomised controlled trial
Objective: the SupportBack 2 randomised controlled trial (RCT) compared the clinical and cost-effectiveness of an internet intervention supporting self-management versus usual primary care in reducing low back pain (LBP)-related disability. In this study, we aimed to identify and understand key processes and potential mechanisms underlying the impact of the intervention.

Design: this was a nested qualitative process evaluation of the SupportBack 2 RCT (ISRCTN: 14736486 pre-results).

Setting: primary care in the UK (England).

Participants: 46 trial participants experiencing LBP without indicators of serious spinal pathologies (eg, fractures, infection) took part in telephone interviews at either 3 (n=15), 6 (n=14) or 12 months (n=17) post randomisation. Five physiotherapists who provided telephone support for the internet intervention also took part in telephone interviews.

Intervention: an internet intervention ‘SupportBack’ supporting self-management of LBP primarily through physical activity and exercise delivered in addition to usual care, with and without physiotherapist telephone support.

Analysis: data were analysed thematically, applying a realist logic to develop context-mechanism-outcome configurations.

Results: four explanatory themes were developed, with five context-mechanism-outcome configurations. Where benefit was reported, SupportBack appeared to work by facilitating a central associative process where participants linked increases in physical activity or exercise with improvements in LBP, then continued to use physical activity or exercise as key regulatory strategies. Participants who reported little or no benefit from the intervention appeared to experience several barriers to this associative process, including negative expectations, prohibitive beliefs about the cause of LBP or functional limitations preventing engagement. Physiotherapists appeared to provide accountability and validation for some; however, the remote telephone support that lacked physical assessment was viewed as limiting its potential value.

Conclusions: digital interventions targeting physical activity and exercise to support LBP self-management may rely on mechanisms that are easily inhibited in complex, heterogeneous populations. Future research should focus on identifying and removing barriers that may limit the effectiveness of digital self-management support for LBP.
RCT, digital intervention, low back pain, self-management, Back pain, Digital Technology, QUALITATIVE RESEARCH, Self-Management, Internet
2044-6055
Geraghty, Adam W.A.
2c6549fe-9868-4806-b65a-21881c1930af
Hughes, Stephanie
05f3a01e-73a1-4b1d-9996-a0028c42ec2e
Roberts, Lisa
0a937943-5246-4877-bd6b-4dcd172b5cd0
Hill, Jonathan C.
93c06d5e-66a4-48f9-be26-3ea5812b38d0
Foster, Nadine E.
2ca79c15-6ada-4b99-982c-f8abee19e628
Hay, Elaine
5fd27b0e-0aff-470d-a404-b0684afd2226
Mansell, Gemma
be6d92d7-996f-49a2-b598-d3be41a1b6d5
White, Malcolm
d6776c3c-87c4-4697-8022-bf3c86f2b578
Davies, Firoza
dfbad70e-7928-4b1c-a26d-9a10281b8833
Steele, Mary
dd7833c4-c04c-495c-aa9a-b23e01a89762
Little, Paul
1bf2d1f7-200c-47a5-ab16-fe5a8756a777
Yardley, Lucy
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
Geraghty, Adam W.A.
2c6549fe-9868-4806-b65a-21881c1930af
Hughes, Stephanie
05f3a01e-73a1-4b1d-9996-a0028c42ec2e
Roberts, Lisa
0a937943-5246-4877-bd6b-4dcd172b5cd0
Hill, Jonathan C.
93c06d5e-66a4-48f9-be26-3ea5812b38d0
Foster, Nadine E.
2ca79c15-6ada-4b99-982c-f8abee19e628
Hay, Elaine
5fd27b0e-0aff-470d-a404-b0684afd2226
Mansell, Gemma
be6d92d7-996f-49a2-b598-d3be41a1b6d5
White, Malcolm
d6776c3c-87c4-4697-8022-bf3c86f2b578
Davies, Firoza
dfbad70e-7928-4b1c-a26d-9a10281b8833
Steele, Mary
dd7833c4-c04c-495c-aa9a-b23e01a89762
Little, Paul
1bf2d1f7-200c-47a5-ab16-fe5a8756a777
Yardley, Lucy
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e

Geraghty, Adam W.A., Hughes, Stephanie, Roberts, Lisa, Hill, Jonathan C., Foster, Nadine E., Hay, Elaine, Mansell, Gemma, White, Malcolm, Davies, Firoza, Steele, Mary, Little, Paul and Yardley, Lucy (2025) Understanding internet-supported self-management for low back pain in primary care: a qualitative process evaluation of the SupportBack 2 randomised controlled trial. BMJ Open, 15 (10), [e103428]. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2025-103428).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: the SupportBack 2 randomised controlled trial (RCT) compared the clinical and cost-effectiveness of an internet intervention supporting self-management versus usual primary care in reducing low back pain (LBP)-related disability. In this study, we aimed to identify and understand key processes and potential mechanisms underlying the impact of the intervention.

Design: this was a nested qualitative process evaluation of the SupportBack 2 RCT (ISRCTN: 14736486 pre-results).

Setting: primary care in the UK (England).

Participants: 46 trial participants experiencing LBP without indicators of serious spinal pathologies (eg, fractures, infection) took part in telephone interviews at either 3 (n=15), 6 (n=14) or 12 months (n=17) post randomisation. Five physiotherapists who provided telephone support for the internet intervention also took part in telephone interviews.

Intervention: an internet intervention ‘SupportBack’ supporting self-management of LBP primarily through physical activity and exercise delivered in addition to usual care, with and without physiotherapist telephone support.

Analysis: data were analysed thematically, applying a realist logic to develop context-mechanism-outcome configurations.

Results: four explanatory themes were developed, with five context-mechanism-outcome configurations. Where benefit was reported, SupportBack appeared to work by facilitating a central associative process where participants linked increases in physical activity or exercise with improvements in LBP, then continued to use physical activity or exercise as key regulatory strategies. Participants who reported little or no benefit from the intervention appeared to experience several barriers to this associative process, including negative expectations, prohibitive beliefs about the cause of LBP or functional limitations preventing engagement. Physiotherapists appeared to provide accountability and validation for some; however, the remote telephone support that lacked physical assessment was viewed as limiting its potential value.

Conclusions: digital interventions targeting physical activity and exercise to support LBP self-management may rely on mechanisms that are easily inhibited in complex, heterogeneous populations. Future research should focus on identifying and removing barriers that may limit the effectiveness of digital self-management support for LBP.

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Accepted/In Press date: 25 September 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 20 October 2025
Published date: 20 October 2025
Keywords: RCT, digital intervention, low back pain, self-management, Back pain, Digital Technology, QUALITATIVE RESEARCH, Self-Management, Internet

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 507203
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507203
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: 5a3bb665-d4f6-435a-a00d-bc42ad515797
ORCID for Adam W.A. Geraghty: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7984-8351
ORCID for Lisa Roberts: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2662-6696
ORCID for Mary Steele: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2595-3855
ORCID for Paul Little: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3664-1873
ORCID for Lucy Yardley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3853-883X

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Date deposited: 01 Dec 2025 17:39
Last modified: 02 Dec 2025 02:47

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Contributors

Author: Stephanie Hughes
Author: Lisa Roberts ORCID iD
Author: Jonathan C. Hill
Author: Nadine E. Foster
Author: Elaine Hay
Author: Gemma Mansell
Author: Malcolm White
Author: Firoza Davies
Author: Mary Steele ORCID iD
Author: Paul Little ORCID iD
Author: Lucy Yardley ORCID iD

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