Johnson, Claire D.Haldeman, ScottChou, RogerNordin, MargaretaGreen, Bart N.Cote, PierreHurwitz, Eric L.Kopansky-Giles, DeborahAcaroglu, EmreCedraschi, ChristineAmeis, ArthurRandhawa, KristiAartun, EllenAdjei-Kwayisi, AfuaAyhan, SelimAziz, AmerBas, TeresaBlyth, FionaBorenstein, DavidBrady, O'DaneBrooks, PeterCamilleri, ConnieCastellote, Juan M.Clay, Michael B.Davatchi, FereydounDudler, JeanDunn, RobertEberspaecher, StefanEmmerich, JuanFarcy, Jean PierreFisher-Jeffes, NormanGoertz, ChristineGrevitt, MichaelGriffith, Erin A.Hajjaj-Hassouni, NajiaHartvigsen, JanHondras, MariaKane, Edward J.Laplante, JulieLemeunier, NadegeMayer, JohnMior, SilvanoMmopelwa, TiroModic, MichaelMoss, JeanMullerpatan, RajaniMuteti, ElijahMwaniki, LillianNgandeu-Singwe, MadeleineOuterbridge, GeoffRajasekaran, ShanmuganathanShearer, HeatherSmuck, MatthewSonmez, ErkinTavares, PatriciaTaylor-Vaisey, AnneTorres, CarlosTorres, Paolavan der Horst, AlexanderVerville, LeslieVialle, EmilianoKumar, Gomatam VijayVlok, AdriaanWatters III, WilliamWong, Chung ChekWong, Jessica J.Yu, HainanYuksel, Selcen2023-02-212023-02-212018-01-0110.1007/s00586-018-5720-zhttps://hdl.handle.net/11443/2875http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00586-018-5720-zPurpose Spine-related disorders are a leading cause of global disability and are a burden on society and to public health. Currently, there is no comprehensive, evidence-based model of care for spine-related disorders, which includes back and neck pain, deformity, spine injury, neurological conditions, spinal diseases, and pathology, that could be applied in global health care settings. The purposes of this paper are to propose: (1) principles to transform the delivery of spine care(2) an evidence-based model that could be applied globallyand (3) implementation suggestions. Methods The Global Spine Care Initiative (GSCI) meetings and literature reviews were synthesized into a seed document and distributed to spine care experts. After three rounds of a modified Delphi process, all participants reached consensus on the final model of care and implementation steps. Results Sixty-six experts representing 24 countries participated. The GSCI model of care has eight core principles: person-centered, people-centered, biopsychosocial, proactive, evidence-based, integrative, collaborative, and self-sustaining. The model of care includes a classification system and care pathway, levels of care, and a focus on the patient's journey. The six steps for implementation are initiation and preparationassessment of the current situationplanning and designing solutionsimplementationassessment and evaluation of programand sustain program and scale up. Conclusion The GSCI proposes an evidence-based, practical, sustainable, and scalable model of care representing eight core principles with a six-step implementation plan. The aim of this model is to help transform spine care globally, especially in low- and middle-income countries and underserved communities.Global burden of diseaseMusculoskeletal systemSpinal diseasesQuality of health careThe Global Spine Care Initiative: model of care and implementationArticleWOS:000448480000017