About Web of the Back
Use of this web site
This web site maybe visited, free of charge,
as many times as you like.
This web site, including all its content, is protected by the
international laws and agreements applicable to intellectual property.
Any change, disposition, or act of public exploitation with reference
to the page and its content are strictly forbidden without the previous
and explicit consent of the Kovacs Foundation.
The Kovacs Foundation authorizes you to print, distribute, or
disseminate the contents of this web site if you do so free of charge,
for health education purposes, and always citing its origin, the
address of this web site, and the fact that the intellectual property
rights of the page and its content belong to the Kovacs Foundation.
Definition
Back pain may indicate the presence of an underlying medical condition
or may be due to back conditions. This web site will only deal with
the latter, generally known as "common back pain".
Common back pain normally varies according to posture and tends
to worsen with exertion. Common back pain is, by far, the most frequent
cause of back pain, including diagnoses of arthritis, disc-herniation,
disc protrusion, muscle contraction, scoliosis, spondylolisthesis,
spinal stenosis, common back pain of unknown origin, etc.
Information on other illnesses such as tumors, infections, osteoporosis,
or digestive problems, has not been included although these may
also cause back pain.
Professional Site
You will find scientific information on common back pain and its
clinical management, which has been carefully chosen by its methodological
reliability. You may consult this Web site as often as
you wish, free of charge.
Our goal is to spare you the burden of searching through the burgeoning
medical literature and the uncertainty created by inconsistencies
in scientific quality. Our task consists in locating all studies
on back pain evaluating published throughout the world, assess them
and summarise those that are reliable because of their scientific
quality. Studies are afterward classified by keywords so that you
may find the most updated, relevant and accurate information on
specific topics of your interest at any moment.
To whom it is directed
Although access is free, this Web site has been especially designed
for physicians and health professionals. If you are not interested
in scientific and technical information, you may move on to the
general
public part of this Web
Topics
The content of this Web site only refers to common back
pain, defined as:
Vertebral or paravertebral, cervical, thoracic and/or lumbosacral
pain, in presence or not of referred or radiating pain, elicited
by postures, movements or strain, and which is not due to fractures,
spondylitis, traumatisms or neoplastic, neurological, infectious,
vascular, endocrine, metabolic, gynecological or psychosomatic causes.
It includes studies on patients operated on for back pain, but
it does not contain, for example, information on back pain due to
tumors or osteoporosis
This Web site is focused on relevant information for health
care providers. You will therefore find information on
epidemiology, etiology and risk factors, diagnosis, treatment, prognosis,
socioeconomical evaluation, systematic reviews, meta-analysis, decision
analysis, clinical practice guidelines and ethical aspects.
We do not undertake systematic review of basic research
articles, although we may include some of them if outcomes
are especially relevant for clinical practice, according to the
Editorial Committee.
This Web site only includes studies performed
with a method of research. Publications not based
on actual research or those not possible to evaluate methodologically,
such as editorials, letters, case reports or non-systematic literature
reviews, are not considered.
Years Reviewed
Only studies published from 1990 onwards have
been retrieved, reviewed and selected for publication in this Web
site. It does not contain articles that have not been published,
nor those published before this date.
Languages
This Web site only includes articles originally published in English,
Spanish, French and German. This limitation is exclusively
due to the language capabilities of the experts involved in article
evaluation, and does not in any way reflect a prejudice against
the scientific quality of studies published in other languages.
Thus, articles in other languages can be evaluated if, in the future,
experts fluent in these languages join our project.
At present, for scientific articles originally published in other
than the considered languages, authors
are invited to submit versions in any of the above mentioned languages
to the Editorial Committee, along with the original publication.
Translated versions will be evaluated with the same system as those
articles published in English, Spanish, French and German.
Working method
Our working
method and quality control procedures for each of the different
processes are described thoroughly in this Web site. Conceptually,
they consist of:
-
Location of clinical trials concerning common back pain in
the MEDLINE, EMBASE, Pascal, Health Star, Psychoinfo, and Bioethics
../databases.
-
Evaluation of the methodological quality of the studies.
-
Summarisation in English and Spanish those studies especially
reliable, based on their scientific quality.
The Editorial Committee welcomes suggestions and criticisms from
the scientific community concerning its working method. Please address
any comments to the Editorial Committee.
Users may also request the
reasons for discarding a specific evaluated article as a result
of the evaluation process. The Editorial Committee does not
intend to create controversy with the authors or the journals where
articles were originally published. However, the Editorial Committe
is open to criticism from the international scientific community
on the working
method. The Editorial Committee
will wellcome your feedback.
Participants
In the acknowledgement
section you may find the names of the of documentalists, screeners,
reviewers, and Editorial Board members who participate in this Web
site.
Correspondence
This Web site is not a forum for discussion or comments on case
reports. The Editorial Committee can be contacted exclusively to:
- Provide a study inadvertently not included, or one published
in a language different to that of the considered articles along
with its translated
version.
- Enquire about reasons for discarding
an article.
- Offer to participate in the content and search for excellence
of this Web as a methodological
reviewer or medical
translator.
- Send comments or suggestions
about our Web site or our working methods.
The Editorial Committee will thank you for your remarks but may
not necessarily answer all individual comments or proposals.
Any person, wishing to collaborate in our endeavour should contact
our Editorial Committee. We
especially invite professionals in evidence-based medicine and interested
in back pain.
General Public Site
This is a scientific web site aimed at informing the general population;
the content is based on scientific information which has been simplified
for the non-technical public. If you are a specialist and are interested
in receiving scientific information, you may request it from our
professional
site.
To decide on the best available treatment for a patient with back
pain, it is necessary to perform a thorough physical examination.
Otherwise an incorrect diagnosis could be easily made and inappropriate
treatments prescribed. This web site does not accept consultations
on clinical cases.
The application of the recommendations of this web site to a specific
patient requires the knowledge and experience of a physician. Since
recommendations cited here might not be strictly applicable to individual
cases, any doubts regarding this information should be discussed
with a physician.
This is a scientific web site. The statements and recommmendations
made come from sources which are considered reliable by the scientific
community, but there controversy may exist over some specific aspects.
This web site is constantly updated, so that its content can be
modified over time because of new research.
We welcome your comments and suggestions to improve this web site,
as well as other issues that you would like to us to include. Please
address your comments to the
Editorial Committee.
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