All Stories

  1. What is helpful and not? Patients’ opinions and beliefs of how to support reduced sedentary behavior during cancer treatment—a thematic analysis
  2. It Has To Be My Way—Reducing Sedentary Time in the Transition to Retirement
  3. Development of an eHealth Intervention Including Self-Management for Reducing Sedentary Time in the Transition to Retirement: Participatory Design Study
  4. Development of an eHealth Intervention Including Self-Management for Reducing Sedentary Time in the Transition to Retirement: Participatory Design Study (Preprint)
  5. Exploring the activities and outcomes of digital teaching and learning of practical skills in higher education for the social and health care professions: a scoping review
  6. The Mediating Role of Healthy Lifestyle Behaviours on the Association between Perceived Stress and Self-Rated Health in People with Non-Communicable Disease
  7. Statistical inference through estimation: Recommendations from the International Society of Physiotherapy Journal Editors
  8. Evaluation of a Web-Based Stress Management Program for Persons Experiencing Work-Related Stress in Sweden (My Stress Control): Randomized Controlled Trial
  9. Biopsychosocial Profiles of Patients With Cardiac Disease in Remote Rehabilitation Processes: Mixed Methods Grounded Theory Approach
  10. Patients’ experiences of the complex trust-building process within digital cardiac rehabilitation
  11. Adherence to and the Maintenance of Self-Management Behaviour in Older People with Musculoskeletal Pain—A Scoping Review and Theoretical Models
  12. The Added Value of a Behavioral Medicine Intervention in Physiotherapy on Adherence and Physical Fitness in Exercise-Based Cardiac Rehabilitation (ECRA): A Randomised, Controlled Trial
  13. An evidence‐based structured one‐year programme to sustain physical activity in patients with heart failure in primary care: A non‐randomized longitudinal feasibility study
  14. Evaluation of a Web-Based Stress Management Program for Persons Experiencing Work-Related Stress in Sweden (My Stress Control): Randomized Controlled Trial (Preprint)
  15. Biopsychosocial Profiles of Patients With Cardiac Disease in Remote Rehabilitation Processes: Mixed Methods Grounded Theory Approach (Preprint)
  16. Recommendations For Core Outcome Domain Set For Whiplash-Associated Disorders (CATWAD)
  17. Physical therapists’ experiences of learning and delivering a complex behavioral medicine intervention to adolescents with pain
  18. Health promotion for older persons by decreasing sedentary behaviour – Editorial
  19. Implementation of a behavioral medicine approach in physiotherapy: impact and sustainability
  20. Predictors of Clinical Reasoning Using the Reasoning 4 Change Instrument With Physical Therapist Students
  21. Artificial intelligence and physiotherapy – editorial
  22. Functional behaviour analysis guided interventions might improve transfer-related behaviour in dementia care dyads: a single case study
  23. Fall Preventive Exercise With or Without Behavior Change Support for Community-Dwelling Older Adults: A Randomized Controlled Trial With Short-Term Follow-up
  24. Predictors before and after multimodal rehabilitation for pain acceptance and engagement in activities at a 1-year follow-up for patients with whiplash-associated disorders (WAD)—a study based on the Swedish Quality Registry for Pain Rehabilitation (SQRP)
  25. One-Year Adherence to the Otago Exercise Program With or Without Motivational Interviewing in Community-Dwelling Older Adults
  26. Integration of behavioral medicine competencies into physiotherapy curriculum in an exemplary Swedish program: rationale, process, and review
  27. Development of the web application My Stress Control – integrating theories and existing evidence
  28. Exploring patients’ experiences of the whiplash injury-recovery process – a meta-synthesis
  29. The complexity of integrating a behavioral medicine approach into physiotherapy clinical practice
  30. User experiences from a web-based, self-management programme: struggling with what I need when stress management is about me
  31. Development and initial evaluation of an instrument to assess physiotherapists’ clinical reasoning focused on clients’ behavior change
  32. Physiotherapy treatment of the diabetic shoulder: health-related quality of life and measures of shoulder function regarding patients with type 1 diabetes
  33. Activity and life-role targeting rehabilitation for persistent pain: feasibility of an intervention in primary healthcare
  34. WHO’s sustainable development goals and physiotherapy in 2018: editorial
  35. Social support, self-rated health and low mood in people on sick leave due to heart failure: a cross-sectional study
  36. Older persons’ experiences of a home-based exercise program with behavioral change support
  37. The case of the missing body
  38. The role of a behavioural medicine intervention in physiotherapy for the effects of rehabilitation outcomes in exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation (ECRA) – the study protocol of a randomised, controlled trial
  39. Is self-efficacy and catastrophizing in pain-related disability mediated by control over pain and ability to decrease pain in whiplash-associated disorders?
  40. Technologies for physical activity self-monitoring: a study of differences between users and non-users
  41. A 5- to 8-year randomized study on the treatment of cervical radiculopathy: anterior cervical decompression and fusion plus physiotherapy versus physiotherapy alone
  42. Positive changes in the European Journal of Physiotherapy during the past couple of years
  43. An individually tailored behavioral medicine treatment in physical therapy for tension-type headache – an experimental single-case study
  44. Efficacy and tolerability of antidepressants in people aged 65 years or older with major depressive disorder – A systematic review and a meta-analysis
  45. Emotions and encounters with healthcare professionals as predictors for the self-estimated ability to return to work: a cross-sectional study of people with heart failure
  46. Received and needed social support in relation to sociodemographic and socio-economic factors in a population of people on sick leave due to heart failure
  47. Editorial
  48. Psychological Treatment of Depression in People Aged 65 Years and Over: A Systematic Review of Efficacy, Safety, and Cost-Effectiveness
  49. The TIDieR checklist will benefit the physiotherapy profession
  50. Investigation of the validity and reliability of a smartphone pedometer application
  51. Effect of verbal persuasion on self-efficacy for pain-related diagnostic sensory testing in individuals with chronic neck pain and healthy controls – a randomized, controlled trial
  52. The Relation between the Fear-Avoidance Model and Constructs from the Social Cognitive Theory in Acute WAD
  53. Inter- and Intra-Rater Reliability of a Newly Developed Assessment Scale: The Dyadic Interaction in Dementia Transfer Assessment Scale (DIDTAS)
  54. Factors Affecting the Outcome of Surgical Versus Nonsurgical Treatment of Cervical Radiculopathy
  55. Treating youth in pain: Comparing tailored behavioural medicine treatment provided by physical therapists in primary care with physical exercises
  56. Heart failure clients’ encounters with professionals and self-rated ability to return to work
  57. Home Help Service Staffs’ Descriptions of Their Role in Promoting Everyday Activities Among Older People in Sweden Who Are Dependent on Formal Care
  58. What is the comparative effectiveness of current standard treatment, against an individually tailored behavioural programme delivered either on the Internet or face-to-face for people with acute whiplash associated disorder? A randomized controlled trial
  59. What is the role of lifestyle behaviour change associated with non-communicable disease risk in managing musculoskeletal health conditions with special reference to chronic pain?
  60. Time for more focus on co-production/co-creation in physiotherapy research?
  61. Associations between socio-demographic factors, encounters with healthcare professionals and perceived ability to return to work in people sick-listed due to heart failure in Sweden: a cross-sectional study
  62. Associations among pain, disability and psychosocial factors and the predictive value of expectations on returning to work in patients who undergo lumbar disc surgery
  63. Development of a new assessment scale for measuring interaction during staff-assisted transfer of residents in dementia special care units
  64. Being on sick leave due to heart failure: self-rated health, encounters with healthcare professionals and social insurance officers and self-estimated ability to return to work
  65. Being on sick leave due to heart failure: Encounters with social insurance officers and associations with sociodemographic factors and self-estimated ability to return to work
  66. Pain, Mind, and Movement in Musculoskeletal Pain
  67. A feasibility study of a randomised controlled trial comparing fall prevention using exercise with or without the support of motivational interviewing
  68. A clinical reasoning model focused on clients’ behaviour change with reference to physiotherapists: its multiphase development and validation
  69. Motivation Does not Come with an Ending—It's the Beginning of Something New: Experiences of Motivating Persons with Psychiatric Disabilities to Physical Activity
  70. A behavioral medicine intervention for older women living alone with chronic pain – a feasibility study
  71. Toward core inter-professional health promotion competencies to address the non-communicable diseases and their risk factors through knowledge translation: Curriculum content assessment
  72. Editorial
  73. The importance of a daily rhythm in a supportive environment – promoting ability in activities in everyday life among older women living alone with chronic pain
  74. Accuracy in Pedometers: Dependent on the Technology for Measurement?
  75. The clinical course over the first year of Whiplash Associated Disorders (WAD): pain-related disability predicts outcome in a mildly affected sample
  76. Moving toward Reclaiming Life: Lived Experiences of Being Physically Active Among Persons with Psychiatric Disabilities
  77. Surgery Versus Nonsurgical Treatment of Cervical Radiculopathy
  78. How children and adolescents in primary care cope with pain and the biopsychosocial factors that correlate with pain-related disability
  79. Physiotherapy treatment of the diabetic shoulder: a longitudinal study following patients with diabetes and shoulder pain using a pre-post treatment design
  80. Fall-Related Self-efficacy in Instrumental Activities of Daily Living is Associated with Falls in Older Community-Living People
  81. Editorial
  82. Physical Function Outcome in Cervical Radiculopathy Patients After Physiotherapy Alone Compared With Anterior Surgery Followed by Physiotherapy
  83. Reciprocal struggling in person transfer tasks – Caregivers’ experiences in dementia care
  84. Pain in children and adolescents in primary care; chronic and recurrent pain is common
  85. Can Caregiver Singing Improve Person Transfer Situations in Dementia Care?
  86. Self‐reported health and physical activity among community mental healthcare users
  87. Daily stressors in patients with acute whiplash associated disorders
  88. Coping Patterns and Their Relation to Daily Activity, Worries, Depressed Mood, and Pain Intensity in Acute Whiplash-Associated Disorders
  89. Self-Perceived non-motor aspects of cervical dystonia and their association with disability
  90. The Role of Educational and Learning Approaches in Rehabilitation of Whiplash-Associated Disorders in Lessening the Transition to Chronicity
  91. Toward Optimal Early Management After Whiplash Injury to Lessen the Rate of Transition to Chronicity
  92. Elevated [11C]-D-Deprenyl Uptake in Chronic Whiplash Associated Disorder Suggests Persistent Musculoskeletal Inflammation
  93. Mentally disordered offenders' daily occupations after one year of forensic care
  94. A further investigation of the importance of pain cognition and behaviour in pain rehabilitation: longitudinal data suggest disability and fear of movement are most important
  95. Ventromedial prefrontal neurokinin 1 receptor availability is reduced in chronic pain
  96. The mediating role of self-efficacy expectations and fear of movement and (re)injury beliefs in two samples of acute pain
  97. A three-group study, internet-based, face-to-face based and standard- management after acute whiplash associated disorders (WAD) – choosing the most efficient and cost-effective treatment: study protocol of a randomized controlled trial
  98. Physical activity, diet and behaviour modification in the treatment of overweight and obese adults: a systematic review
  99. Chronic whiplash symptoms are related to altered regional cerebral blood flow in the resting state
  100. Background factors related to and/or influencing occupation in mentally disordered offenders
  101. Classification of patients with whiplash associated disorders (WAD): Reliable and valid subgroups based on the Multidimensional Pain Inventory (MPI‐S)
  102. Head posture in patients with whiplash-associated disorders and the measurement method's reliability – A comparison to healthy subjects
  103. Personality traits as predictors of occupational performance and life satisfaction among mentally disordered offenders
  104. Mentally Disordered Offenders’ Abilities in Occupational Performance and Social Participation
  105. A new treatment programme to improve balance in elderly people--an evaluation of an individually tailored home-based exercise programme in five elderly women with a feeling of unsteadiness
  106. Intra- and inter-rater reliability of goniometric method of measuring head posture
  107. Coping as a Mediating Factor Between Self-Efficacy and Disability in Whiplash Associated Disorders (WAD)
  108. An integrated physiotherapy/cognitive-behavioural approach to the analysis and treatment of chronic Whiplash Associated Disorders, WAD
  109. Cognitive behavioural components in physiotherapy management of chronic whiplash associated disorders (WAD) - a randomised group study
  110. Acute whiplash-associated disorders (WAD): the effects of early mobilization and prognostic factors in long-term symptomatology
  111. Long-term functional and psychological problems in whiplash associated disorders