| Literature DB >> 34991627 |
Serena Bezdjian1, James M Whedon2, Robb Russell2, Justin M Goehl3, Louis A Kazal3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Primary Spine Care (PSC) is an innovative model for the primary management of patients with spine-related disorders (SRDs), with a focus on the use of non-pharmacological therapies which now constitute the recommended first-line approach to back pain. PSC clinicians serve as the initial or early point of contact for spine patients and utilize evidence-based spine care pathways to improve outcomes and reduce escalation of care (EoC; e.g., spinal injections, diagnostic imaging, hospitalizations, referrals to a specialist). The present study examined 6-month outcomes to evaluate the efficiency of care for patients who received PSC as compared to conventional primary care. We hypothesized that patients seen by a PSC clinician would have lower rates of EoC compared to patients who received usual care by a primary care (PC) clinician.Entities:
Keywords: Academic primary care clinic; Chiropractic; Efficiency; Low back pain; Primary care; Primary spine care; Spine pain escalation of care; Spine-related disorders
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34991627 PMCID: PMC8740480 DOI: 10.1186/s12998-022-00411-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chiropr Man Therap ISSN: 2045-709X
Fig. 1Data capture and cohort assembly
Patient characteristics for groups A (PSC patients) and B (PC patients) (N = 2692)
| Characteristics | Group A (PSC Patients) n = 1363 | Group B (PC Patients) n = 1329 | Chi-square/t-test | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (mean) | ||||
| Age in years at index (initial visit) | 48 | 54.5* | ||
| Sex (%) | 10.06 | |||
| Female | 64%* | 58% | ||
| Race/ethnicity (%) | 4.07 | |||
| White/Caucasian | 95% | 96% | ||
| Marital status (%) (n = 2687) | ||||
| Cohabiting | 57.5% | 58.3% | 0.199 | |
| Not cohabiting | 15.1% | 15.1% | ||
| Employment status (%) | 55.15 | p < .001 | ||
| Employed (FT, PT, self-employed) | 66.7% | 54.1% | ||
| Retired | 16.2% | 26.9% | ||
| Unemployed | 10.5% | 12.0% | ||
| Other (student, unknown) | 6.6% | 6.9% | ||
| Primary diagnosis (pain source) at index date—pain source (%) | 1263.12 | |||
| Radicular | 7.7% | 17.8% | ||
| Disc | 18.3% | 2.6% | ||
| Facet or segmental dysfunction | 55.8% | 4.5% | ||
| Myofascial | 3.2% | 12.6% | ||
| Non-specific back pain | 14.2% | 56.7% | ||
| Other | 0.9% | 5.8% | ||
| Charlson Comorbidity Score (mean) | 0.63 | 0.95* |
Frequencies presented for most common categories. Categories for marital status and employment status were collapsed for ease of analysis. p-values are from Pearson chi-square analyses or t-tests. Mean Charlson score and age based on a t-test. Race/Ethnicity reports Fisher’s Exact probability. Mean age was significantly higher for patients in Group B (PC patient) (p < .001). Frequency of females was significantly higher in Group A (p = .002), and mean Charlson score was significantly higher in Group B (p < .001)
Fig. 2Percentage of patients who filled a prescription for opioid analgesic within six months of initial visit. Note: Percent of patients who filled a prescription (Rx) was significantly higher in Group B χ2 = 93.9, p < .001 (Fischer’s exact). This graph presents the frequency of patients (based on a dichotomized yes/no variable) who filled a prescription within 6 months of Index
Fig. 3Frequency of Escalated Spine Care Encounters in the PSC and PC Groups (N = 2692). Note: Percentages are frequencies of patients in each group that utilized the various healthcare resources; Differences in the frequencies between the groups was determined using Pearson chi-square test statistics. All comparisons were significant at p < .05 except for Emergency Department (ED) visits. Dx = Diagnostic imaging
Likelihood of escalation of care for patients who received primary spine care versus usual primary care
| Outcome | OR | 95% CI OR | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hospitalizations (n = 73) | .47 | .23–.97 | p = .04 |
| Surgeries (n = 32) | .51 | .19–1.36 | p = .18 |
| Emergency department (ED) visits (n = 38) | .91 | .37–2.22 | p = .83 |
| Pain prescription fills (n = 243) | .43 | .29–.65 | p < .001 |
| Diagnostic imaging of the spine (n = 292) | .87 | .63–1.21 | p = .41 |
| Spinal injections (n = 124) | .56 | .33–.95 | p = .03 |
| Specialist visits (n = 184) | .48 | .35–.67 | p < .001 |
Group B (PC Patients) served as the referent (comparison) group. All outcomes coded as binary (0/1, “no/yes”) for binary logistic GLM models (controlling for covariates: age, gender, employment status, primary diagnosis, and Charlson score; although depending on the clinical outcome, not all covariates were significant in the various models). OR = odds ratio from the regression model (equivalent to the exp(b) statistic). P-values are from the Wald test reported for the exposure variable (group/cohort)