Chronic musculoskeletal pain continues to constitute a rising cost and burden on individuals and society on a global level, thus driving the demand for improved management strategies. The biopsychosocial model has long been a recommended approach to help manage chronic pain, with its consideration of the person and his or her experiences, psychosocial context, and societal considerations. However, the biomedical model continues to be the basis of athletic therapy and athletic training programs and therefore clinical practice. For more than 30 years, psychosocial factors have been identified in the literature as outcome predictors relating to chronic pain, including (but not limited to) catastrophizing, fear avoidance, and self-efficacy. Physical assessment strategies such as validated outcome measures can be used by the athletic therapist and athletic trainer to determine the presence or severity (or both) of nonbiogenic pain. Knowledge of these predictors and strategies allows the athletic therapist and athletic trainer to frame the use of exercise (eg, graded exposure), manual therapy, and therapeutic modalities in the appropriate way to improve clinical outcomes. Through changes in educational curricula content, such as those recommended by the International Association for the Study of Pain, athletic therapists and athletic trainers can develop profession-specific knowledge and skills that will enhance their clinical practice and enable them to better assist those living with chronic musculoskeletal pain conditions.
Keywords: athletic therapist; athletic therapy; athletic trainer.
© by the National Athletic Trainers' Association, Inc.