| Literature DB >> 18828906 |
George Ioannidis1, Lehana Thabane, Amiram Gafni, Anthony Hodsman, Brent Kvern, Dan Johnstone, Nathalie Plumley, Lena Salach, Famida Jiwa, Jonathan D Adachi, Alexandra Papaioannou.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While the Osteoporosis Canada 2002 Canadian guidelines provided evidence based strategies in preventing, diagnosing, and managing this condition, publication and distribution of guidelines have not, in and of themselves, been shown to alter physicians clinical approaches. We hypothesize that primary care physicians enrolled in the Quality Circle project would change their patient management of osteoporosis in terms of awareness of osteoporosis risk factors and bone mineral density testing in accordance with the guidelines.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18828906 PMCID: PMC2567974 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-9-130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Figure 1Five phases of the Canadian quality circle project. 1) Introduction, Training & Baseline Data Collection, 2) First Educational Intervention & First Follow-Up Data Collection 3) First Strategy Implementation Session, 4) Final Educational Intervention & Final Follow-up Data Collection, and 5) Final Strategy Implementation Session & final follow-up data collection (Figure 1). Members committed to the first year of the project, which consist of Quality Circle phases one to three. Those who were interested and willing to commit to the second year of the project completed the remaining project phases (four and five).
Study and patient characteristics of the quality circle project
| Number of provinces | 7 | 7 |
| Number of cities | 109 | 97 |
| Number of circles | 34 | 34 |
| Number of physicians | 340 | 301 |
| Number of chart reviews | 8376 | 7354 |
| Age ≥ 65 yrs | 5337/8362 (63.8) | 4440/7341 (60.5) |
| Prior hip fracture | 152/8366 (1.8) | 187/7344 (2.6) |
| Prior wrist fracture | 353/8367 (4.2) | 393/7345 (5.3) |
| Prior vertebral fracture | 486/8365 (5.8) | 481/7339 (6.6) |
| Family history of fracture | 431/8368 (5.2) | 649/7337 (8.9) |
| At least 1 fall in the previous 12 months | 926/8365 (11.1) | NA* |
| Oral Prednisone therapy (> 3 months) | 353/8366 (4.2) | NA* |
| Menopause before age 45 yrs | 689/8364 (8.2) | 643/7339 (8.8) |
| Any other major risk factor | 3485/8364 (41.7) | 1166/7329 (25.1) |
| Two or more minor risk factors | 1467/8356 (17.6) | 1378/7326 (18.8) |
| High risk | 6486/8376 (77.4) | 5569/7354 (75.7) |
| Bone density testing: n with characteristic (%) | n = 8371 | n = 7328 |
| No test | 2822 (33.7) | 1897 (25.9) |
| T-score: >-1 | 1490 (17.5) | 1295 (17.7) |
| T-score: -1 to -2.5 | 2028 (24.2) | 2282 (31.4) |
| T-score: <-2.5 | 1774 (21.2) | 1272 (17.4) |
| Test results pending | 257 (3.1) | 582 (7.9) |
*NA = not available (it was not measured during follow-up).
Physicians' perceived uncertainty of their patients risk factor status
| Patient characteristics: n uncertain/total n (%) | Baseline | 1st Follow-up n (%) |
| Age ≥ 65 yrs | 0/8362 (0.0) | 1/7341(< 0.1) |
| Prior hip fracture | 151/8366 (1.8) | 23/7344 (0.3) |
| Prior wrist fracture | 238/8367 (2.8) | 93/7345 (1.3) |
| Prior vertebral fracture | 823/8365 (9.8) | 537/7339 (7.3) |
| Family history of fracture | 4238/8368 (50.7) | 1939/7337 (26.4) |
| At least 1 fall in the previous 12 months | 853/8365 (10.2) | NA* |
| Oral Prednisone therapy (> 3 months) | 92/8366 (1.1) | NA* |
| Menopause before age 45 yrs | 1794/8364 (21.5) | 835/7339 (11.4) |
| Any other major risk factor | 176/8364 (2.1) | 63/7329 (0.9) |
| Two or more minor risk factors | 518/8356 (6.2) | 131/7326 (1.8) |
Physician's check off the uncertain option on the standardized form for the above patient characteristics (physicians were unaware whether their patients had this characteristic). *NA = not available (it was not measured during follow-up).
Figure 2Change in physicians' perceived certainty of their patients' risk factor status during the 1 The generalized estimating equations approach was used to model differences in physician perceived awareness of risk factors pre and post 1st educational intervention. Values are expressed as adjusted and unadjusted odds ratios (OR) and corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CI) are reported. Generalized estimating equations method was used to take into account the clustered nature of the data (patients within physicians). All risk factors in figure 2 were included in the adjusted analysis. Overall Certainty = all the risk factors in figure 2 combined. UP = upper. The fit of the models ranged from 0.714 to < 0.001.
Bone mineral density testing in high and low risk patients
| Patient characteristics: n with characteristic/total n (%) | Baseline | Follow-up |
| Reason for being in high risk group | ||
| Facture* | 706/883 (80.0) | 735/922 (79.6) |
| Age (yr)* | 3564/5333 (66.8) | 3384/4433 (76.3) |
| Family History* | 362/431 (84.0) | 574/648 (88.6) |
| Other Major* | 2389/3484 (68.6) | 953/1159 (82.2) |
| Overall High Risk Group | 4426/6482 (68.3) | 4343/5557 (78.2) |
| Low risk group: | ||
| One minor or no risk factors | 1123/1889 (59.5) | 1088/1771 (61.4) |
* Patients may have had other risk factors.
Figure 3Change in bone mineral density testing depending of risk factor status during the 1 The generalized estimating equations approach was used to model differences in appropriate utilization of bone mineral density testing pre and post 1st educational intervention. Values are expressed as adjusted and unadjusted odds ratios (OR) and corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CI) are reported. Generalized estimating equations method was used to take into account the clustered nature of the data (patients within physicians). All risk factors in figure 3 were included in the adjusted analysis along with the two way interaction terms with phase. The fit of the models was < 0.001.
Reasons why primary care physicians conducted a bone mineral density test in high and low risk patients
| Group: High Risk* | Group: Low Risk* | |
| Total # in group | n = 4190 | n = 1054 |
| Patients request: # (%) | 173 (4.1) | 218 (20.7) |
| High risk due to fracture: # (%) | 468 (11.2) | 3 (0.3) |
| High risk (other): # (%) | 1358 (32.4) | 38 (3.6) |
| To asses risk for fracture: # (%) | 2033 (48.5) | 699 (66.3) |
| Other | 158 (3.8) | 96 (9.1) |
| Total # in group | n = 1139 | n = 646 |
| Test not available: # (%) | 17 (1.5) | 1 (0.2) |
| Patient at low risk: # (%) | 231 (20.3) | 499 (77.2) |
| Patient refused: # (%) | 188 (16.5) | 15 (2.3) |
| Other: # (%) | 703 (61.7) | 131 (20.3) |
* High risk: one major or two minor risk factors for fracture; Low- risk: one minor or no risk factors for fracture. These data were collected during Phase II.