Haldeman, ScottJohnson, Claire DChou, RogerNordin, MargaretaCôté, PierreHurwitz, Eric LGreen, Bart NCedraschi, ChristineAcaroğlu, EmreKopansky-Giles, DeborahAmeis, ArthurAdjei-Kwayisi, AfuaAyhan, SelimBlyth, FionaBorenstein, DavidBrady, O'DaneBrooks, PeterCamilleri, ConnieCastellote, Juan ManuelClay, Michael BDavatchi, FereydounDunn, RobertGoertz, ChristineGriffith, Erin AHondras, MariaKane, Edward JLemeunier, NadègeMayer, JohnMmopelwa, TiroModic, MichaelMoss, JeanMullerpatan, RajaniMuteti, ElijahMwaniki, LillianNgandeu-Singwe, MadeleineOuterbridge, GeoffRandhawa, KristiShearer, HeatherSönmez, ErkinTorres, CarlosTorres, PaolaVerville, LeslieVlok, AdriaanWatters, WilliamWong, Chung ChekYu, Hainan2021-06-212021-06-212018Eur Spine J. 2018 Sep;27(Suppl 6):901-914.http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12105/13168Purpose The purpose of this report is to describe the development of an evidence-based care pathway that can be implemented globally. Methods The Global Spine Care Initiative (GSCI) care pathway development team extracted interventions recommended for the management of spinal disorders from six GSCI articles that synthesized the available evidence from guidelines and relevant literature. Sixty-eight international and interprofessional clinicians and scientists with expertise in spine-related conditions were invited to participate. An iterative consensus process was used. Results After three rounds of review, 46 experts from 16 countries reached consensus for the care pathway that includes fve decision steps: awareness, initial triage, provider assessment, interventions (e.g., non-invasive treatment; invasive treatment; psychological and social intervention; prevention and public health; specialty care and interprofessional management), and outcomes. The care pathway can be used to guide the management of patients with any spine-related concern (e.g., back and neck pain, deformity, spinal injury, neurological conditions, pathology, spinal diseases). The pathway is simple and can be incorporated into educational tools, decision-making trees, and electronic medical records. Conclusion A care pathway for the management of individuals presenting with spine-related concerns includes evidencebased recommendations to guide health care providers in the management of common spinal disorders. The proposed pathway is person-centered and evidence-based. The acceptability and utility of this care pathway will need to be evaluated in various communities, especially in low- and middle-income countries, with diferent cultural background and resources.engVoRhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Delivery of health careEvidence-based practiceQuality of health careTriageCritical PathwaysDelphi TechniqueHumansSpinal DiseasesTriageThe Global Spine Care Initiative: care pathway for people with spine-related concernsAttribution 4.0 International3015181127Suppl 6901-91410.1007/s00586-018-5721-y1432-0932European Spine Journalopen access