Literature DB >> 26816049

Initial integration of chiropractic services into a provincially funded inner city community health centre: a program description.

Steven R Passmore1, Audrey Toth2, Joel Kanovsky2, Gerald Olin3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The burden of fees for chiropractic services rendered often falls on the patient and must be provided out-of-pocket regardless of their socioeconomic status and clinical need. Universal healthcare coverage reduces the financial barrier to healthcare utilization, thereby increasing the opportunity for the financially disadvantaged to have access to care. In 2011 the Canadian Province of Manitoba initiated a pilot program providing access to chiropractic care within the Mount Carmel Clinic (MCC), a non-secular, non-profit, inner city community health centre.
OBJECTIVE: To describe the initial integration of chiropractic services into a publically funded healthcare facility including patient demographics, referral patterns, treatment practices and clinical outcomes.
METHOD: A retrospective database review of chiropractic consultations in 2011 (N=177) was performed.
RESULTS: The typical patient referred for chiropractic care was a non-working (86%), 47.3(SD=16.8) year old, who self-identified as Caucasian (52.2%), or Aboriginal (35.8%) and female (68.3%) with a body mass index considered obese at 30.4(SD=7.0). New patient consultations were primarily referrals from other health providers internal to the MCC (71.2%), frequently primary care physicians (76%). Baseline to discharge comparisons of numeric rating scale scores for the cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacroiliac and extremity regions all exceeded the minimally clinically important difference for reduction in musculoskeletal pain. Improvements occurred over an average of 12.7 (SD=14.3) treatments, and pain reductions were also statistically significant at p<0.05.
CONCLUSION: Chiropractic services are being utilized by patients, and referring providers. Clinical outcomes indicate that services rendered decrease musculoskeletal pain in an inner city population.

Entities:  

Keywords:  chiropractic; low-income population; multidisciplinary; musculoskeletal; populations, underserved; program description; spinal manipulation

Year:  2015        PMID: 26816049      PMCID: PMC4711334     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Can Chiropr Assoc        ISSN: 0008-3194


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1.  Erratum.

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