Assignment overview
Create a discussion board post and peer responses on the assessment and primary care management of low back pain in adults, drawing on the Aquifer Family Medicine β45-year-old male with low back painβ case and current guidelines. The task evaluates your ability to translate case-based learning into concise, clinically focused discussion that reflects advanced health assessment reasoning.
Assignment brief (discussion board)
Course / module context
-
Example course: Advanced Health Assessment / Primary Care Management
-
Example code: NU610, NURS 612, or equivalent graduate nursing assessment courseβ
-
Assessment type: Online discussion board post and peer responses linked to the Aquifer low back pain case.β
Task description
Write an initial discussion post that analyses the presentation of a 45-year-old adult with acute low back pain using an assessment-focused lens. Integrate subjective and objective data, highlight red-flag screening, and propose an initial management strategy that is consistent with recent low back pain guidelines. Then respond to two peers by comparing and refining diagnostic reasoning and management choices in light of the evidence.β
Detailed instructions
Part 1: Initial discussion post
Target length: 400β500 words.
Address the following points in a single, well-structured post:
-
Focused history and red-flag screening
-
Summarise key elements of the history of present illness for acute low back pain, including onset, location, duration, character, radiation, aggravating and relieving factors, severity, and functional impact.β
-
Identify at least five red-flag questions you would ask this patient and indicate whether the Aquifer case data suggest concern for serious pathology such as malignancy, fracture, infection, or cauda equina syndrome.β
📚 Expert Tutors WritersNeed a custom essay writer? Superior paper help with writing a similar assignment: Advanced health assessment forum on managing acute low back pain?
Our qualified academic writers, 75% of whom hold Masters or PhD degrees, write fully original papers tailored to your rubric, citation style, and deadline. Rated 4.9/5 by thousands of students. Free Turnitin plagiarism report included.
Get Expert Help →
-
-
Targeted physical examination priorities
-
Outline the main musculoskeletal and neurologic examination components you would perform, including inspection, palpation, range of motion, gait, reflexes, strength testing, and straight leg raise.β
-
Briefly explain how abnormal findings from these manoeuvres could shift your working diagnosis or prompt urgent investigation.β
-
-
Diagnostic impression and need for imaging
-
State your primary working diagnosis for this case (for example, non-specific mechanical low back pain) and list two plausible differential diagnoses supported by the case details.β
-
Justify whether imaging is indicated at this stage by linking to current guideline recommendations on low back pain in primary care, including when to avoid early imaging.β
-
-
Initial management and patient education
-
Propose a brief initial management plan that includes first-line pharmacologic options (such as NSAIDs or acetaminophen), non-pharmacologic strategies (activity advice, physical therapy, self-management education), and follow-up timing.β
-
Describe two or three key education points you would share with this patient about prognosis, warning signs, and ways to reduce recurrence risk.β
-
Support at least two aspects of your discussion with recent peer-reviewed literature or guidelines (2018β2026). Use in-text citations in Harvard style.
Part 2: Peer responses
Target length: 150β200 words per response (two responses; 300β400 words total).
Can someone write my paper professionally and confidentially?
Yes — My Homework Ace Tutors connects you with expert human writers in your subject area. Every paper is written from scratch (zero AI), checked for plagiarism, formatted to your specifications, and delivered before your deadline with 100% confidentially. Free revisions for 14 days.
🖉 Start My Order →For each peer response:
-
Comment on how your colleague applied red-flag criteria and whether you agree with their threshold for imaging or referral.β
-
Suggest one additional assessment question, exam manoeuvre, or management option that could strengthen their approach, with brief reference to evidence where appropriate.
-
Acknowledge an element of their reasoning that aligns with current guidelines and explain why it is clinically sound.β
Avoid simple agreement or repetition of content. Focus on refining diagnostic and management thinking.
Discussion rubric
1. Clinical assessment and reasoning (40%)
-
Clear summary of focused history and red-flag screening tailored to low back pain in a middle-aged adult.β
-
Logical link between history, examination priorities, and diagnostic impressions.
-
Accurate differentiation between non-specific mechanical pain and more serious causes, supported by case details and guideline concepts.β
2. Evidence-informed management (30%)
-
Management plan aligns with current recommendations for acute or subacute low back pain in primary care, including judicious use of pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic strategies.β
-
Justification for ordering or withholding imaging reflects established criteria and recognises potential harms of unnecessary tests.β
🎉 Limited OfferSave 20% on your first order today
Use code SAVE20 at checkout. Our writers deliver AI-free, plagiarism-free papers ranging from short 1-page essays to full dissertations, and with deadlines from 4 hours to weeks due assignments. Money-back guarantee included.
🏢 Claim 20% Off → -
Patient education messages are realistic, clear, and consistent with evidence about prognosis and self-management.β
3. Quality of peer engagement (20%)
-
Responses to peers extend the discussion through constructive critique, alternative suggestions, or clarification of evidence rather than repetition.
-
Comments remain respectful, specific, and focused on improving clinical judgement and patient care decisions.
4. Scholarly writing and referencing (10%)
-
Writing is clear, coherent, and organised, with a professional academic tone appropriate for graduate nursing study.
-
In-text citations and reference list follow Harvard style, with recent peer-reviewed sources supporting key points.
Low back pain in primary care often reflects non-specific mechanical causes, so a structured history and examination help separate benign presentations from those that require urgent investigation. Focused questions about trauma, night pain, weight loss, fever, neurologic change, and bowel or bladder dysfunction guide decisions about imaging and referral. Simple measures such as NSAIDs or acetaminophen, early mobilisation, and targeted physical therapy usually form the foundation of management, provided red flags are absent and the patient receives clear education about prognosis and self-care strategies. Guideline-based restraint in ordering imaging reduces cost, radiation exposure, and the risk of incidental findings that do not change treatment but may increase anxiety.
References
-
Oliveira, C.B. et al. (2019) βClinical practice guidelines for the management of non-specific low back pain in primary care: An updated overviewβ,Β <i>European Spine Journal</i>, 28(11), pp. 2681β2692.Β https://doi.org/10.1007/s00586-019-06222-1β
-
Corp, N. et al. (2021) βEvidence-based treatment recommendations for neck and low back pain across Europe: A systematic review of guidelinesβ,Β <i>European Journal of Pain</i>, 25(2), pp. 275β295.Β https://doi.org/10.1002/ejp.1679β
-
Qaseem, A., Wilt, T.J., McLean, R.M. and Forciea, M.A. (2017, reaffirmed 2020) βNoninvasive treatments for acute, subacute, and chronic low back pain: A clinical practice guideline from the American College of Physiciansβ,Β <i>Annals of Internal Medicine</i>, 166(7), pp. 514β530.Β https://doi.org/10.7326/M16-2367β
-
Skelly, A.C. et al. (2018) βNoninvasive nonpharmacological treatment for chronic pain: A systematic reviewβ,Β <i>Comparative Effectiveness Review</i>Β No. 209, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.Β https://effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/products/nonpharma-treatment-pain/researchβ