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Low back pain in children and adolescents: To treat or not?
A. Kim Burton
Department of Nursing
School of Human and Health Sciences
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Review article
›
peer-review
25
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Citations (Scopus)
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Keyphrases
Low Back Pain
100%
Medical Attention
100%
Back Pain in children
100%
Age Groups
50%
Life Experiences
50%
Lifestyle Modification
50%
Treatment Efficacy
50%
Psychosocial Consequences
50%
Clinical Practice Guidelines
50%
Normal Life
50%
Cohort Data
50%
Adult Life
50%
With Disabilities
50%
Common Symptoms
50%
Chemonucleolysis
50%
Chronic Nonspecific Low Back Pain
50%
Early Activation
50%
Treatment Change
50%
Serious Spinal Pathology
50%
Follow Current
50%
Nursing and Health Professions
Adolescent
100%
Low Back Pain
100%
Efficacy
50%
Lifestyle Modification
50%
Life Experience
50%
Personal Experience
50%
Clinical Guideline
50%
Medicine and Dentistry
Low Back Pain
100%
Lifestyle Modification
50%
Personal Experience
50%
Clinical Guideline
50%
Spinal Pathology
50%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Personal Experience
100%
Chemonucleolysis
100%
Neuroscience
Low Back Pain
100%
Clinical Guideline
50%
Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science
Low Back Pain
100%