I
Ivan Lin
Researcher at University of Western Australia
Publications - 45
Citations - 1632
Ivan Lin is an academic researcher from University of Western Australia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 35 publications receiving 1095 citations. Previous affiliations of Ivan Lin include University of Limerick & Curtin University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
What does best practice care for musculoskeletal pain look like? Eleven consistent recommendations from high-quality clinical practice guidelines: systematic review
Ivan Lin,Louise Wiles,Robert Waller,Roger Goucke,Yusuf Nagree,Michael Gibberd,Leon Straker,Christopher G. Maher,Peter O'Sullivan +8 more
TL;DR: 11 recommendations for MSK pain care are identified to ensure care is patient centred, screen for red flag conditions, assess psychosocial factors, use imaging selectively, undertake a physical examination, monitor patient progress, and provide education/information to improve the quality of care.
Journal ArticleDOI
Altered motor control strategies in subjects with sacroiliac joint pain during the active straight-leg-raise test.
Peter O'Sullivan,Darren Beales,Julie A Beetham,Jillian Cripps,Felicitas Graf,Ivan Lin,Beatrice Tucker,Anita Avery +7 more
TL;DR: The study findings formally identified altered motor control strategies and alterations of respiratory function in subjects with sacroiliac joint pain that appear to represent a compensatory strategy of the neuromuscular system to enhance force closure of the pelvis where stability has been compromised by injury.
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Experiences of using the Theoretical Domains Framework across diverse clinical environments: a qualitative study
Cameron J Phillips,Andrea Marshall,Nadia Chaves,Stacey K. Jankelowitz,Ivan Lin,Clement T. Loy,Gwyneth Rees,Leanne Sakzewski,Susie Thomas,The‐Phung To,Shelley A. Wilkinson,Susan Michie +11 more
TL;DR: The TDF provided a useful, flexible framework for a diverse group of health professionals working across different clinical settings for the assessment of barriers and targeting resources to influence behavior change for implementation projects.
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Making Sense of Low Back Pain and Pain-Related Fear
TL;DR: This clinical commentary illustrates how Leventhal’s common‐sense model may assist physical therapists to understand the broader sense‐making processes involved in the fear‐avoidance cycle, and how they can be altered to facilitate fear reduction by applying strategies established in the behavioral medicine literature.
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'Yarn with me': applying clinical yarning to improve clinician-patient communication in Aboriginal health care.
TL;DR: An overarching framework for practitioners to help them reorientate their communication with Aboriginal patients using 'clinical yarning', a patient-centred approach that marries Aboriginal cultural communication preferences with biomedical understandings of health and disease is presented.