Changing the Landscape of Spine Care
A Training, Engagement & Impact Report on the 90-Minute Spine Pathway Training program — provider participation, clinical attitude change, and satisfaction data.
Musculoskeletal conditions are the leading driver of healthcare costs and patient disability. This training equips providers with an evidence-based approach that reduces unnecessary imaging, specialist referrals, and opioid prescriptions — lowering costs while improving patient outcomes.
40
Total Registrants
40
Completed Training
100%
Provider Satisfaction
Unique providers enrolled i Count of unique provider emails registered through the CME Information form.
Completed pre & post assessments i Providers who submitted both the Intake Survey (pre-training) and Completion Survey (post-training), enabling before/after analysis.
Rate confidence & applicability highly i Percentage of providers in Evaluation #2 who answered 'Highly' or 'Mostly' to questions about confidence in managing MSK patients and ability to apply course knowledge.
Training Data
i Enrollment trends and provider demographics from the CME registration form. This data reflects the breadth of multidisciplinary provider engagement.Broad, multidisciplinary participation ensures the spine pathway approach reaches providers across the care continuum — from primary care to specialty practice.
Registrations Over Time
i Monthly enrollment count based on CME form submission date. Tracks adoption momentum over time.Provider Credentials
i Breakdown of participating provider types: MD, DO, DC, PT/DPT, PA, NP, and RN. A diverse provider mix signals system-wide alignment.Attitude & Belief Change
PABS Scale The Pain Attitudes and Beliefs Scale (PABS) is a validated, peer-reviewed instrument that measures how well a clinician's beliefs about musculoskeletal pain align with current evidence. A shift toward biopsychosocial beliefs is associated with reduced unnecessary imaging, fewer specialist referrals, and lower opioid prescribing.Changing behavior starts with changing beliefs.
Many clinicians hold a biomedical view of pain that has contributed to runaway costs and poor outcomes in spine care, including the opioid crisis. The PABS measures whether this training shifts providers toward a biopsychosocial approach — one that is more consistent with prevailing evidence and results in more appropriate, lower-cost care.
Biomedical questions (Q1-10): A decrease after training reflects reduced reliance on imaging, passive treatments, and pain-contingent care.
Biopsychosocial questions (Q11-19): An increase after training reflects greater confidence in exercise, active coping strategies, and psychosocial contributors to recovery.
Satisfaction Data
i Aggregated ratings from Evaluation #1 (mid-course) and Evaluation #2 (post-course). Covers program quality, instructor effectiveness, clinical relevance, confidence, and applicability.High provider satisfaction drives adoption, repeat engagement, and peer referrals — the foundation of a sustainable training program that scales across health systems.
Recommendation Rate
i Percentage of providers who answered 'Highly' or 'Mostly' when asked about confidence in managing MSK patients and ability to apply the training. A direct measure of perceived clinical value.Engagement Data
i Provider engagement metrics from the learning platform — email campaigns, content access, and ongoing resource utilization. Integration in progress.Sustained engagement after initial training signals lasting behavior change — the ultimate measure of program impact.
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Email Open Rate
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Click-Through Rate
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Content Engagement
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