The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTION

Pain trains your nervous system to predict danger before you move.

Pick one movement you've been avoiding. Before you do it, write down what pain you expect (0-10) and what bad thing you think will happen. Now do the movement. Notice the gap between what you predicted and what actually happened. That gap is the active ingredient.

  1. Two interventions get conflated all the time. Graded exposure targets the fear-prediction. Graded activity targets the avoidance behavior. Both work, but for different patients.
  2. Most clinical "graded exposure" is generic progressive exercise wearing a borrowed label. The real protocol has a written fear hierarchy and a pre/post prediction rating. If those aren't in the chart, the active ingredient wasn't delivered.
  3. The first thing to do is screen, not exercise. A five-minute fear-avoidance questionnaire (TSK-11) tells you whether this person needs exposure work or just structured activity progression. Without it, the wrong tool gets used.

Imagine a smoke alarm that's been triggered so many times by burnt toast that it now goes off when you walk past the kitchen. The kitchen is fine. The alarm is the problem. Graded exposure is the deliberate, slow process of cooking near the alarm and proving to it — over and over — that nothing is on fire. The alarm rewires when the prediction keeps failing.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.
Physio Engine — The Verdict

Graded Exposure and Graded Activity

Two related but distinct ways to retrain a person back into life and movement after pain has trained them to avoid it. One targets the fear of specific movements. The other targets the avoidance behavior itself.

Chronic MSK pain MODERATE-HIGH Triage: RED

What Works

Graded exposure protocol cinematic visual

Tier 1 — Strong Evidence

  1. StrongGraded exposure in vivo for high-fear chronic LBP. 8-17 sessions over 6-12 weeks. Individualised written fear hierarchy + in-session pre/post prediction rating. Woods 2008 RCT, Leeuw 2008 RCT, López-de-Uralde-Villanueva 2016 SR/MA, APTA 2021 LBP CPG endorsement, mediator confirmed by O'Neill 2020.
  2. StrongGraded activity (operant time-contingent quota) for sub-acute LBP and return-to-work focus. 8-12 sessions; baseline-quota then linear time-contingent progression independent of within-bounds pain flares. Macedo 2010 SR, APTA CPG endorsement.
  3. StrongGraded exposure for complex regional pain syndrome type I. Skilled practitioner, individualised hierarchy, 6-8 sessions. de Jong 2005 replicated SCED.
Tier 2 — Moderate Evidence
  1. ModeratePNE + graded exposure stack for central-sensitisation features. 1-3 PNE sessions then hierarchy work.
  2. ModerateGraded exposure + manual therapy for chronic pelvic pain (women). 8 weeks twice-weekly, patient-centred individualised hierarchy. Ariza-Mateos 2019 RCT.
  3. ModerateGET Living for adolescent chronic MSK pain (in-person or telehealth). 8-10 sessions, family-coached. Simons 2024 RCT, Shear 2022 telehealth adaptation.
  4. ModerateCognitive Functional Therapy. 12-week intervention; mediator-confirmed. O'Neill 2020.
  5. ModerateVR-assisted graded movement. Direction-of-effect confirmed, magnitude heterogeneous. Lo 2024 SR/MA.
Tier 3 — Emerging
  1. EmergingGraded exposure pilot evidence in older adults with CLBP. Feasibility-positive but efficacy underpowered. Leonhardt 2017.
  2. EmergingPain-memory reconsolidation framing. Mechanism hypothesis — not biomarker-confirmed in MSK populations. Nijs 2015.

What Doesn't Work

  • Generic progressive exercise marketed as "graded exposure" — no fear hierarchy, no expectancy work, no fidelity to the active ingredient.
  • Universal protocol regardless of fear-avoidance stratification — without TSK-11 or FABQ at intake, the wrong tool gets used.
  • Coercive progression at clinician pace ahead of patient prediction-falsification — breaks the trust contract and inverts expectancy violation into expectancy confirmation.
  • Self-directed graded exposure without minimal coaching for high-fear patients.
  • Continued passive treatment as a substitute when a graded approach is indicated.

Exercise Prescription

Each Session — The Six-Step Template

StepWhat you doWhy
1Pick the next item on the hierarchy.Patient-led pace is part of the active ingredient.
2Predict the outcome — pain rating and feared consequence. Write it down.Makes the prediction explicit so the mismatch is visible.
3Do the movement — slowly, deliberately, with full attention.This is the exposure.
4Re-rate the actual outcome. Write it down.This is the expectancy violation. The mismatch is the medicine.
5Discuss the gap.Anchors the new prediction.
6Plan the next exposure for between sessions.Hierarchy completion needs repetition.

Intake Screening Bundle

ToolWhat it measuresCutoff for high-fear
TSK-11Fear of movement / re-injury≥ 41
FABQ-PA / FABQ-WFear-avoidance beliefs (physical activity / work)FABQ-PA ≥ 15, FABQ-W ≥ 34 (commonly cited)
PCSRumination, magnification, helplessness≥ 30
PSEQConfidence to function despite painLower predicts worse outcomes

Progression

Pain rule for loaded movements: ≤ 2/10 during, ≤ 2/10 at 24 hours. Cross-protocol with shoulder progressive loading and MCL sprain pathways.

Return to Training

Red Flags — Refer Immediately

A graded approach is for chronic pain after red flags have been cleared. Pause and refer if any of these are present.

  • New neurological deficit — bowel or bladder dysfunction, saddle anaesthesia, progressive motor weakness.
  • Constitutional symptoms — unexplained weight loss, night sweats, fevers.
  • Severe night pain unrelated to position.
  • History of cancer with new spinal pain.
  • Trauma history with severe pain or visible deformity.
  • New, escalating psychiatric symptoms during exposure work — suicidality, panic with derealisation, dissociation.
  • Worsening pain catastrophising or fear scores over four consecutive sessions despite hierarchy work.

Refer to: GP for medical workup, mental-health clinician for psychiatric red flags, A&E for acute neurological emergency, specialist pain service for treatment-resistant chronic pain.

The Takeaway

Pick one movement you have been avoiding. Before you do it, write down what pain you expect on a 0-10 scale and what bad thing you think will happen. Now do the movement. Notice the gap between what you predicted and what actually happened. That gap is the active ingredient.

The Verdict

Pain trains your nervous system to predict danger before you move. Graded approaches retrain that prediction by giving it new evidence.

Imagine a smoke alarm that has been triggered so many times by burnt toast that it now goes off when you walk past the kitchen. The kitchen is fine. The alarm is the problem. Graded exposure is the deliberate, slow process of cooking near the alarm and proving to it, over and over, that nothing is on fire. The alarm rewires when the prediction keeps failing.

Three Things You Need to Know

  1. What this actually is: Two interventions get conflated all the time. Graded exposure targets the fear-prediction with a written hierarchy and an explicit predicted-vs-actual rating. Graded activity targets the avoidance behavior with a time-contingent quota that progresses on a calendar regardless of within-bounds pain. Both work, but for different patients.
  2. What most people get wrong: Most clinical "graded exposure" is generic progressive exercise wearing a borrowed label. The real protocol has a written fear hierarchy and a pre/post prediction rating. If those are not in the chart, the active ingredient was not delivered.
  3. Start here: Screen, do not exercise. A five-minute fear-avoidance questionnaire (TSK-11) tells you whether this person needs exposure work or just structured activity progression. Without it, the wrong tool gets used on the wrong patient.

Best for

Adults with chronic MSK pain over 12 weeks, specific avoided movements, and a clear gap between objective findings and reported disability — especially when fear-avoidance scores are elevated.

Skip if

Active red-flag pathology, acute injury inside its healing window, untreated psychiatric crisis, or comorbid PTSD with movement-related trauma — those need primary management first.

Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling.

Conviction

Overall: MODERATE-HIGH. MODERATE-HIGH

What would change my mind — graded exposure superiority

A multicentre pragmatic RCT (N ≥ 400 per stratum) of fidelity-controlled graded exposure vs fidelity-controlled graded activity in chronic LBP, stratified at intake by TSK-11 ≥ 41 vs < 41, with disability and fear endpoints at 6 and 12 months. A finding that exposure does NOT outperform activity in the high-fear stratum on disability would downgrade graded-exposure conviction from HIGH to MODERATE.

What would change my mind — telehealth delivery

A head-to-head RCT of in-clinic vs telehealth-delivered fidelity-controlled graded exposure in adults with chronic MSK pain, N ≥ 200 per arm, non-inferiority margin pre-registered, primary endpoint TSK-11 reduction at 6 months. Telehealth non-inferiority would upgrade telehealth-delivery conviction from MODERATE to MODERATE-HIGH and reshape access-and-cost framing.

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