Low back pain: a call for action

Low back pain is the leading worldwide cause of years lost to disability and its burden is growing alongside the increasing and ageing population.1 Because these population shifts are more rapid in low-income and middle-income countries, where adequate resources to address the problem might not exis...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Lancet (British edition) 2018-06, Vol.391 (10137), p.2384-2388
Hauptverfasser: Buchbinder, Rachelle, van Tulder, Maurits, Öberg, Birgitta, Costa, Lucíola Menezes, Woolf, Anthony, Schoene, Mark, Croft, Peter, Hartvigsen, Jan, Cherkin, Dan, Foster, Nadine E, Maher, Chris G, Underwood, Martin, Anema, Johannes R, Chou, Roger, Cohen, Stephen P, Menezes Costa, Lucíola, Ferreira, Manuela, Ferreira, Paulo H, Fritz, Julie M, Genevay, Stéphane, Gross, Douglas P, Hancock, Mark J, Hoy, Damian, Karppinen, Jaro, Koes, Bart W, Kongsted, Alice, Louw, Quinette, Peul, Wilco C, Pransky, Glenn, Sieper, Joachim, Smeets, Rob J, Turner, Judith A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Low back pain is the leading worldwide cause of years lost to disability and its burden is growing alongside the increasing and ageing population.1 Because these population shifts are more rapid in low-income and middle-income countries, where adequate resources to address the problem might not exist, the effects will probably be more extreme in these regions. Most low back pain is unrelated to specific identifiable spinal abnormalities, and our Viewpoint, the third paper in this Lancet Series,2,3 is a call for action on this global problem of low back pain.
ISSN:0140-6736
1474-547X
1474-547X
DOI:10.1016/S0140-6736(18)30488-4