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Management of Medically Unexplained Chronic Orofacial Pain: Justification for Behavioural Interventions

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Management of Medically Unexplained Chronic Orofacial Pain: Justification for Behavioural Interventions. / Goldthorpe, Joanna; Lovell, Karina; Peters, Sarah et al.
In: Journal of Sleep Medicine and Disorders, Vol. 3, No. 1, 1038, 25.01.2016.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Goldthorpe, J, Lovell, K, Peters, S, Mcgowan, L & Aggarwal, V 2016, 'Management of Medically Unexplained Chronic Orofacial Pain: Justification for Behavioural Interventions', Journal of Sleep Medicine and Disorders, vol. 3, no. 1, 1038. <http://www.jscimedcentral.com/SleepMedicine/vol3issue1.php>

APA

Goldthorpe, J., Lovell, K., Peters, S., Mcgowan, L., & Aggarwal, V. (2016). Management of Medically Unexplained Chronic Orofacial Pain: Justification for Behavioural Interventions. Journal of Sleep Medicine and Disorders, 3(1), Article 1038. http://www.jscimedcentral.com/SleepMedicine/vol3issue1.php

Vancouver

Goldthorpe J, Lovell K, Peters S, Mcgowan L, Aggarwal V. Management of Medically Unexplained Chronic Orofacial Pain: Justification for Behavioural Interventions. Journal of Sleep Medicine and Disorders. 2016 Jan 25;3(1):1038.

Author

Goldthorpe, Joanna ; Lovell, Karina ; Peters, Sarah et al. / Management of Medically Unexplained Chronic Orofacial Pain : Justification for Behavioural Interventions. In: Journal of Sleep Medicine and Disorders. 2016 ; Vol. 3, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{47cb80fe986a46aab4e55978b647e6b8,
title = "Management of Medically Unexplained Chronic Orofacial Pain: Justification for Behavioural Interventions",
abstract = "Chronic Orofacial Pain (COFP) is currently treated according to a biomedicalmodel, particularly in primary care, where management often involves invasive and irreversible treatments that are not evidence based and do not improve outcomes for patients. Studies have shown that COFP shares a number of risk factors and maintaining features with other medically unexplained conditions/symptoms (MUS), which are associated with psychological, social and behavioural dysfunctions. Evidence from studies of COFP and other MUS suggests that CBT based therapies may be effective in targeting both maintaining and exacerbating features and subsequently improve outcomes for patients. This piece positions COFP as the MUS of dentistry, affording a unique perspective in terms of exploring possible non-invasive management techniques, which should be a priority for future testing.",
author = "Joanna Goldthorpe and Karina Lovell and Sarah Peters and Linda Mcgowan and Vishal Aggarwal",
year = "2016",
month = jan,
day = "25",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
journal = "Journal of Sleep Medicine and Disorders",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Management of Medically Unexplained Chronic Orofacial Pain

T2 - Justification for Behavioural Interventions

AU - Goldthorpe, Joanna

AU - Lovell, Karina

AU - Peters, Sarah

AU - Mcgowan, Linda

AU - Aggarwal, Vishal

PY - 2016/1/25

Y1 - 2016/1/25

N2 - Chronic Orofacial Pain (COFP) is currently treated according to a biomedicalmodel, particularly in primary care, where management often involves invasive and irreversible treatments that are not evidence based and do not improve outcomes for patients. Studies have shown that COFP shares a number of risk factors and maintaining features with other medically unexplained conditions/symptoms (MUS), which are associated with psychological, social and behavioural dysfunctions. Evidence from studies of COFP and other MUS suggests that CBT based therapies may be effective in targeting both maintaining and exacerbating features and subsequently improve outcomes for patients. This piece positions COFP as the MUS of dentistry, affording a unique perspective in terms of exploring possible non-invasive management techniques, which should be a priority for future testing.

AB - Chronic Orofacial Pain (COFP) is currently treated according to a biomedicalmodel, particularly in primary care, where management often involves invasive and irreversible treatments that are not evidence based and do not improve outcomes for patients. Studies have shown that COFP shares a number of risk factors and maintaining features with other medically unexplained conditions/symptoms (MUS), which are associated with psychological, social and behavioural dysfunctions. Evidence from studies of COFP and other MUS suggests that CBT based therapies may be effective in targeting both maintaining and exacerbating features and subsequently improve outcomes for patients. This piece positions COFP as the MUS of dentistry, affording a unique perspective in terms of exploring possible non-invasive management techniques, which should be a priority for future testing.

UR - https://pureprojects.ppad.man.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/management-of-medically-unexplained-chronic-orofacial-pain-justification-for-behavioural-interventions(71ec8e7a-269f-4e70-8256-9dbbd96f2caf).html

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3

JO - Journal of Sleep Medicine and Disorders

JF - Journal of Sleep Medicine and Disorders

IS - 1

M1 - 1038

ER -