Galan-Martin, Miguel AngelMontero-Cuadrado, FedericoLluch-Girbes, EnriqueCoca-López, María CarmenMayo-Iscar, AgustínCuesta-Vargas, Antonio2024-02-122024-02-122020-04-22http://hdl.handle.net/10668/3722http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12105/18034Chronic musculoskeletal pain affects more than 20% of the population, leading to high health care overload and huge spending. The prevalence is increasing and negatively affects both physical and mental health, being one of the leading causes of disability. The most common location is the spine. Most treatments used in the Public Health Services are passive (pharmacological and invasive) and do not comply with current clinical guidelines, which recommend treating pain in primary care (PC) with education and exercise as the first-line treatments. A randomized multicentre clinical trial has been carried out in 12 PC centres. The experimental group (EG) conducted a program of pain neuroscience education (6 sessions, 10 h) and group physical exercise with playful, dual-tasking, and socialization-promoting components (18 sessions in 6 weeks, 18 h), and the control group performed the usual physiotherapy care performed in PC. The experimental treatment improved quality of life (d = 1.8 in physical component summary), catastrophism (d = 1.7), kinesiophobia (d = 1.8), central sensitization (d = 1.4), disability (d = 1.4), pain intensity (d = 3.3), and pressure pain thresholds (d = 2). Differences between the groups (p < 0.001) were clinically relevant in favour of the EG. Improvements post-intervention (week 11) were maintained at six months. The experimental treatment generates high levels of satisfaction.engVoRhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Chronic painChronic spinal painPain neuroscience educationPhysical exercisePrimary careRandomized controlled trialDolor crónicoEjercicio físicoAtención primariaEnsayo clínico controlado aleatorioPain MeasurementQuality of LifeMusculoskeletal PainCentral Nervous System SensitizationControl GroupsMental HealthPain ThresholdPersonal SatisfactionMotor ActivityDelivery of Health CareChronic PainPrimary Health CarePain Neuroscience Education and Physical Therapeutic Exercise for Patients with Chronic Spinal Pain in Spanish Physiotherapy Primary Care: A Pragmatic Randomized Controlled TrialAttribution 4.0 International3233132310.3390/jcm90412012077-0383Journal of Clinical Medicineopen access