| Literature DB >> 35534844 |
Craig Moore1, Arnold Y L Wong2, Katie de Luca3, Diana De Carvalho4, Melker S Johansson5,6, Katherine A Pohlman7, Amy Miller8, Martha Funabashi9,10, Paul Dougherty11, Simon French3, Jon Adams12, Greg Kawchuk13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The unprecedented impact of COVID-19 on healthcare professionals has implications for healthcare delivery, including the public health guidance provided to patients. This study aims to assess the response and impact of COVID-19 on chiropractors internationally, and examines the public health response of chiropractors to the COVID-19 pandemic practising under a musculoskeletal spine-care versus subluxation-based care paradigm.Entities:
Keywords: Behaviours; COVID-19; Chiropractors; Infection control; Telehealth
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35534844 PMCID: PMC9081962 DOI: 10.1186/s12998-022-00432-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chiropr Man Therap ISSN: 2045-709X
Sociodemographic characteristics of participating chiropractors (n = 2061)
| Characteristics | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Male | 1061 (51.5%) |
| Female | 988 (47.9%) |
| Other/prefer not to say | 12 (0.6%) |
| Age (Mean ± SD) | 47.5 ± 11.9 years |
| Years in practice (Mean ± SD) | 19.6 ± 11.4 years |
| Town or smaller regional city | 954 (46.3%) |
| Major city (Urban/metropolitan) | 935 (45.4%) |
| Rural/remote region | 172 (8.3%) |
| Canada | 727 (35.3%) |
| United Kingdom | 468 (22.7%) |
| United States | 333 (16.2%) |
| Australia | 279 (13.5%) |
| Denmark | 153 (7.4%) |
| Hong Kong | 69 (3.3%) |
| Others | 28 (1.3%) |
| United States | 654 (31.7%) |
| Canada | 514 (24.9%) |
| United Kingdom | 481 (23.3%) |
| Australia | 294 (14.2%) |
| Denmark | 84 (4.1%) |
| New Zealand | 11 (0.5%) |
| Others | 21 (1.0%) |
| Doctor of Chiropractic | 1496 (72.6%) |
| Bachelor/double Bachelor | 325 (16.3%) |
| Master of Chiropractic | 167 (8.1%) |
| Diploma/Advanced Diploma | 63 (3.1%) |
| Master of Science | 504 (24.5%) |
| Doctor of Philosophy | 34 (1.6%) |
| More than one | 1523 (73.9%) |
| Other chiropractor(s) or osteopath(s) | 1126 (32.3%) |
| Complementary medicine practitioners e.g., Massage therapist, Acupuncturist, Naturopath | 1040 (29.8%) |
| Allied Health Practitioner e.g., Psychologist, Physical therapist, Exercise Physiologist, Podiatrist, Dietician | 600 (17.2%) |
| Sole practitioner only | 526 (15.1%) |
| GP/Family Physician or Medical Specialist | 191 (5.5%) |
| Spine/musculoskeletal conditions | 1388 (67.3%) |
| Chiropractic subluxations | 573 (27.8%) |
| Neither | 100 (4.9%) |
Practitioner and practice response to the COVID-19 pandemic (n = 2050)
| Overall n (% yes) | Australia n (% yes) | Canada n (% yes) | Denmark n (% yes) | Hong Kong n (% yes) | UK n (% yes) | USA n (% yes) | Others n (% yes) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Increased disinfecting of treatment table/equipment* | 1942 (94.7%) | 270 (96.8%) | 704 (97.2%) | 131 (85.6%) | 61 (88.4%) | 447 (96.1%) | 301 (91.5%) | 28 (90.3%) |
| Increased disinfecting of high contact areas* | 1934 (94.3%) | 264 (94.6%) | 711 (98.2%) | 146 (95.4%) | 57 (82.6%) | 436 (92.8%) | 293 (89.1%) | 27 (87.1%) |
| Increased disinfecting/cleaning of my hands* | 1920 (93.7%) | 265 (95.0%) | 704 (97.2%) | 134 (87.6%) | 69 (100%) | 435 (93.5%) | 289 (87.8%) | 24 (77.4%) |
| Providing patient hand sanitiser* | 1909 (93.1%) | 269 (96.4%) | 724 (95.0%) | 144 (94.1%) | 62 (89.9%) | 449 (96.6%) | 266 (80.9%) | 31 (100%) |
| Social distance patient seating* | 1828 (89.2%) | 246 (88.2%) | 690 (95.3%) | 142 (92.8%) | 40 (58.0%) | 405 (87.1%) | 277 (84.2%) | 28 (90.3%) |
| Change spacing patient bookings* | 1629 (79.5%) | 186 (66.7%) | 663 (91.6%) | 98 (64.1%) | 23 (33.3%) | 416 (89.5%) | 223 (67.8%) | 20 (64.5%) |
| Protective screen added to reception desk* | 1202 (58.6%) | 81 (29.0%) | 549 (75.8%) | 117 (76.5%) | 36 (52.2%) | 270 (58.1%) | 134 (40.7%) | 15 (48.4%) |
| Care restricted to urgent/emergency cases* | 805 (39.3%) | 67 (24.0%) | 370 (46.0%) | 75 (49.0%) | 9 (13.0%) | 202 (43.4%) | 73 (22.2%) | 9 (29.0%) |
| Patient care stopped* | 764 (37.3%) | 230 (17.6%) | 351 (48.5%) | 34 (22.2%) | 1 (1.4%) | 246 (52.9%) | 71 (21.6%) | 12 (38.7%) |
| None of the above | 10 (0.5%) | 0 (0.0%) | 3 (0.4%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (0.4%) | 4 (1.2%) | 1 (3.1%) |
| Wearing cloth/standard surgical mask* | 1755 (85.3%) | 188 (67.4%) | 670 (92.2%) | 134 (87.6%) | 65 (94.2%) | 407 (87.2%) | 289 (80.7%) | 23 (74.2%) |
| Wearing face and/or eye shielding* | 969 (47.1%) | 23 (8.2%) | 82 (11.3%) | 9 (5.9%) | 31 (44.9%) | 82 (17.6%) | 66 (19.9%) | 8 (25.8%) |
| Wearing new disposable gloves during treatment* | 723 (35.1%) | 44 (15.8%) | 90 (12.4%) | 3 (2.0%) | 50 (72.5%) | 440 (94.2%) | 88 (26.5%) | 8 (25.8%) |
| Wearing protective garments/clothing* | 673 (32.7%) | 15 (5.4%) | 180 (24.8%) | 0 (0.0%) | 10 (14.5%) | 427 (91.4%) | 39 (11.7%) | 2 (6.5%) |
| Wearing N95 respirator/mask* | 301 (14.6%) | 23 (8.2%) | 82 (11.3%) | 9 (5.9%) | 31 (44.9%) | 82 (17.6%) | 66 (19.9%) | 8 (25.8%) |
| None of the above were advised* | 86 (4.1%) | 46 (16.5%) | 15 (2.1%) | 2 (2.9%) | 2 (2.9%) | 5 (1.1%) | 12 (14.1%) | 23 (74.2%) |
| Not sure what was advised* | 61 (3.0%) | 23 (13.6%) | 8 (1.1%) | 1 (0.7%) | 1 (1.4%) | 8 (1.7%) | 19 (5.7%) | 1 (3.2%) |
| Yes, all that were advised (when available) | 1611 (84.8%) | 150 (58.8%) | 603 (83.3%) | 138 (91.4%) | 64 (97.0%) | 405 (86.9%) | 233 (70.2%) | 18 (58.1%) |
| Yes, some of what was advised | 253 (12.9%) | 40 (15.8%) | 93 (12.8%) | 10 (6.6%) | 1 (1.5%) | 48 (10.3%) | 55 (16.6%) | 6 (19.4%) |
| Never or rarely | 161 (2.3%) | 65 (25.5%) | 28 (3.9%) | 3 (2.0%) | 1 (1.5%) | 13 (2.8%) | 44 (13.3%) | 7 (22.6%) |
| Wearing cloth/standard surgical mask* | 1697 (82.5%) | 160 (57.8%) | 649 (89.3%) | 135 (88.2%) | 66 (97.1%) | 380 (81.4%) | 286 (85.9%) | 21 (65.6%) |
| Wearing face and/or eye shielding* | 189 (9.2%) | 11 (4.0%) | 35 (4.8%) | 34 (22.2%) | 42 (60.9%) | 37 (7.9%) | 28 (8.4%) | 2 (6.3%) |
| Wearing an N95 respirator/mask* | 119 (5.8%) | 10 (3.6%) | 23 (3.2%) | 6 (3.9%) | 31 (44.9%) | 18 (3.9%) | 29 (8.7%) | 2 (6.3%) |
| Wearing new disposable gloves during treatment * | 114 (5.5%) | 2 (0.7%) | 14 (1.9%) | 0 (0.0%) | 41 (59.4%) | 42 (9.0%) | 11 (3.3%) | 4 (3.5%) |
| Wearing protective garments/clothing | 61 (3.0%) | 0.0 (0.0%) | 17 (2.3%) | 0 (0.0%) | 3 (4.3%) | 38 (8.1%) | 3 (0.9%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| None of the above were advised* | 209 (10.2%) | 76 (27.3%) | 54 (7.4%) | 7 (4.6%) | 2 (2.9%) | 48 (10.3%) | 14 (4.2%) | 8 (25.0%) |
| Not sure what was advised* | 94 (4.6%) | 32 (11.5%) | 12 (1.7%) | 1 (0.7%) | 1 (1.4%) | 23 (4.9%) | 24 (7.2%) | 1 (3.1%) |
| Yes, all that were advised (when available) | 1524 (75.6%) | 128 (52.2%) | 597 (82.2%) | 138 (91.4%) | 64 (95.5%) | 350 (75.6%) | 230 (69.1%) | 17 (54.8%) |
| Yes, some of what was advised | 165 (8.2%) | 24 (9.8%) | 51(7.0%) | 5 (3.3%) | 2 (3.0%) | 32 (19.4%) | 47 (14.1%) | 17 (54.8%) |
| Never or rarely | 327 (16.2%) | 93 (38.1%) | 78 (10.7%) | 8 (5.3%) | 1 (0.3%) | 82 (24.8%) | 56 (16.8%) | 10 (32.3%) |
| Avoid treatment until after testing -ve or after quarantine for at least 2 weeks if + ve | 1698 (82.6%) | 239 (86.3%) | 612 (84.4%) | 111 (72.5%) | 60 (87.0%) | 414 (88.7%) | 238 (71.5%) | 24 (75.0%) |
| Advise to avoid treatment until after their symptoms passed | 237 (11.5%) | 20 (7.2%) | 87 (12.0%) | 37 (24.2%) | 3 (4.3%) | 40 (8.6%) | 45 (13.5%) | 5 (15.6%) |
| Provide treatment using additional protective measures | 90 (4.4%) | 16 (5.8%) | 19 (2.6%) | 4 (2.6%) | 4 (5.8%) | 8 (1.7%) | 39 (11.4%) | 1 (3.1%) |
| Provide treatment without additional protective measures | 19 (0.9%) | 1 (0.4%) | 4 (0.6%) | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (2.9%) | 4 (0.9%) | 7 (2.1%) | 1 (3.1%) |
| Not sure what to do | 12 (0.6%) | 1 (0.4%) | 3 (0.4%) | 1 (0.7%) | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (0.2%) | 5 (1.5%) | 1 (3.1%) |
| Yes | 107 (5.2%) | 12 (4.3%) | 20 (2.8%) | 9 (5.9%) | 2 (1.9%) | 35 (7.5%) | 28 (8.4%) | 1 (3.2%) |
| Yes | 515 (26.5%) | 33 (12.4%) | 176 (25.0%) | 24 (16.7%) | 1 (1.5%) | 196 (45.4%) | 76 (25.0%) | 9 (29.0%) |
| More than 75% | 157 (25.2%) | 3 (6.7%) | 39 (20.0%) | 4 (12.1%) | 1 (33.3%) | 35 (7.5%) | 28 (8.4%) | 2 (20.0%) |
| Between 50–75% | 19 (2.9%) | 1 (5.6%) | 5 (2.8%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 7 (3.0%) | 5 (4.8%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Between 25–50% | 29 (4.7%) | 2 (4.4%) | 7 (3.6%) | 2 (6.1%) | 1 (33.3%) | 8 (3.5%) | 9 (8.7%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Between 1–25% | 263 (42.4%) | 34 (75.6%) | 105 (53.8%) | 23 (69.7%) | 1 (33.3%) | 52 (22.5%) | 45 (43.3%) | 3 (30.0%) |
| Not in practise during peak | 154 (24.8%) | 5 (11.1%) | 39 (20.0%) | 4 (12.1%) | 0 (0.0%) | 84 (36.4%) | 17 (16.3%) | 5 (50.0%) |
| No | 1154 (56.6%) | 160 (57.8%) | 468 (65.3%) | 129 (84.9%) | 52 (75.4%) | 156 (33.5%) | 174 (52.7%) | 15 (46.9%) |
| Yes | 328 (16.1%) | 56 (20.2%) | 113 (15.8%) | 14 (9.2%) | 4 (5.8%) | 48 (10.3%) | 90 (27.4%) | 3 (9.4%) |
| Not relevant (all care is fully patient funded) | 560 (20.6%) | 61 (10.9%) | 136 (19.0%) | 9 (5.9%) | 13 (18.8%) | 261 (56.1%) | 66 (20.0%) | 14 (43.3%) |
| No, same guidelines for all healthcare practitioners | 936 (45.6%) | 103 (37.1%) | 332 (45.8%) | 88 (58.3%) | 51 (75.0%) | 176 (37.7%) | 175 (52.7%) | 11 (34.4%) |
| Yes | 848 (41.3%) | 138 (49.6%) | 276 (38.1%) | 51 (33.8%) | 15 (22.1%) | 240 (51.4%) | 113 (34.0%) | 15 (46.9%) |
| Unsure | 269 (13.1%) | 37 (13.3%) | 117 (16.1%) | 12 (7.9%) | 2 (2.9%) | 51 (10.9%) | 44 (13.3%) | 6 (18.8%) |
Some items with missing data ranging from 1 to 11 respondents, *P < 0.001
COVID-19 patient education provided by chiropractors during the COVID-19 pandemic (n = 2061)
| Overall | Australia | Canada | Denmark | Hong Kong | UK | USA | Others | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | 1692 (82.6%) | 229 (82.4%) | 610 (84.8%) | 142 (92.8%) | 39 (56.5%) | 383 (82.4%) | 265 (79.6%) | 24 (75.0%) |
| During face-to-face consultations | 1319 (78.0%) | 185 (80.8%) | 471 (77.2%) | 94 (66.2%) | 29 (74.4%) | 298 (77.8%) | 228 (86.0%) | 14 (58.3%) |
| On patient phone calls* | 1088 (64.3%) | 123 (53.7%) | 399 (65.4%) | 94 (66.2%) | 27 (69.2%) | 281 (73.4%) | 153 (57.7%) | 11 (45.8%) |
| Brochures/posters in practice areas* | 1077 (63.7%) | 150 (65.5%) | 425 (69.7%) | 110 (77.5%) | 25 (64.1%) | 226 (59.0%) | 130 (49.1%) | 11 (45.8%) |
| Through patient emails/mail-out* | 872 (51.5%) | 107 (46.7%) | 356 (58.4%) | 25 (17.6%) | 16 (41.0%) | 249 (65.0%) | 108 (40.8%) | 13 (45.8%) |
| On the practice website* | 864 (51.1%) | 98 (42.8%) | 316 (51.8%) | 105 (73.9%) | 24 (61.5%) | 224 (58.5%) | 91 (34.3%) | 6 (25.0%) |
| Social media posts* | 744 (44.0%) | 100 (43.7%) | 253 (41.5%) | 81 (57.0%) | 15 (38.5%) | 187 (48.8%) | 98 (37.0%) | 10 (41.7%) |
| Patient text-messages* | 536 (31.7%) | 93 (40.6%) | 119 (19.5%) | 69 (48.6%) | 19 (48.7%) | 158 (41.3%) | 70 (26.4%) | 8 (33.3%) |
| During patient teleconferencing/webinar* | 252 (14.9%) | 14 (6.1%) | 59 (23.4%) | 13 (5.2%) | 18 (46.2%) | 95 (24.8%) | 50 (18.9%) | 3 (12.5%) |
| Chiropractic associations/organisations | 597 (29.5%) | 88 (32.2%) | 171 (23.8%) | 26 (17.1%) | 36 (52.2%) | 215 (47.1%) | 56 (17.4%) | 5 (15.5%) |
| Chiropractic regulatory board | 302 (14.9%) | 21 (7.7%) | 205 (23.8%) | 1 (0.7%) | 1 (1.4%) | 54 (11.8%) | 20 (6.2%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Government reports/website | 846 (41.8%) | 131 (48.0%) | 287 (40.0%) | 118 (77.6%) | 23 (33.3%) | 135 (29.6%) | 136 (42.2%) | 16 (50.0%) |
| World Health Organisation | 75 (3.7%) | 12 (4.4%) | 14 (1.9%) | 1 (0.7%) | 7 (10.1%) | 15 (3.3%) | 22 (6.8%) | 4 (12.5%) |
| Search/reviewing COVID-19 research myself | 160 (7.9%) | 16 (5.9%) | 32 (4.5%) | 3 (2.0%) | 1 (1.4%) | 30 (6.6%) | 76 (23.6%) | 2 (6.3%) |
| Preferred commentators (media/social media) | 13 (0.6%) | 1 (0.4%) | 3 (0.4%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (0.4%) | 7 (2.2%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| TV/internet/radio/Newspaper news reports | 18 (0.9%) | 4 (1.5%) | 1 (0.1%) | 3 (2.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (0.4%) | 4 (1.2%) | 4 (12.5%) |
| Family/friend/another chiropractor | 11 (0.5%) | 0 (0.0%) | 5 (0.7%) | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (1.4%) | 3 (0.7%) | 1 (0.3%) | 1 (3.1%) |
Some items with missing data ranging from 1 to 11 respondents, *P < 0.001
Impacts of COVID-19 pandemic on the business and finances of chiropractors (n = 2058)
| Overall | Australia | Canada | Denmark | Hong Kong | UK | USA | Others | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Practice suspended due to COVID-19 pandemic | 1014 (49.3%) | 32 (11.5%) | 470 (64.6%) | 34 (22.4%) | 1 (1.4%) | 363 (77.7%) | 98 (29.4%) | 16 (50.0%) |
| Decreased > 50% | 528 (25.7%) | 77 (27.7%) | 190 (26.1%) | 89 (58.6%) | 3 (4.3%) | 57 (12.2%) | 108 (32.4%) | 4 (12.5%) |
| Decreased 25–50% | 203 (9.9%) | 81 (29.1%) | 27 (3.7%) | 13 (8.6%) | 9 (13.0%) | 5 (1.1%) | 62 (18.6%) | 6 (18.8%) |
| Decreased 1–25% | 103 (5.0%) | 49 (17.6%) | 9 (1.2%) | 2 (1.2%) | 5 (7.2%) | 3 (0.6%) | 33 (9.9%) | 2 (6.3%) |
| Stayed about the same | 49 (2.4%) | 15 (5.4%) | 5 (0.7%) | 4 (2.6%) | 6 (8.7%) | 2 (0.4%) | 15 (4.5%) | 2 (6.3%) |
| Increased 1–25% | 26 (1.3%) | 8 (2.9%) | 2 (0.3%) | 0 (0.0%) | 9 (13.0%) | 1 (0.2%) | 6 (1.8%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Increased 25–50% | 19 (0.9%) | 7 (2.5%) | 2 (0.3%) | 0 (0.0%) | 7 (10.1%) | 0 (0.0%) | 3 (0.9%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Increased > 50% | 39 (1.9%) | 3 (1.1%) | 1 (0.1%) | 2 (1.3%) | 27 (39.1%) | 2 (0.4%) | 4 (1.2%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Not practising during peak of COVID-19 | 77 (3.7%) | 6 (2.2%) | 6 (2.2%) | 21 (2.9%) | 8 (5.3%) | 2 (2.9%) | 34 (7.3%) | 2 (6.3%) |
| Completely stopped | 843 (42.6%) | 18 (6.7%) | 420 (59.5%) | 13 (9.0%) | 1 (1.5%) | 320 (73.9%) | 54 (16.5%) | 17 (56.7%) |
| Decreased > 50% | 526 (26.6%) | 70 (26.0%) | 218 (30.9%) | 68 (47.2%) | 5 (7.5%) | 69 (15.9%) | 93 (28.4%) | 3 (10.0%) |
| Decreased 25%-50% | 250 (12.6%) | 76 (28.3%) | 38 (5.4%) | 34 (23.6%) | 7 (10.4%) | 25 (5.8%) | 64 (19.5%) | 8 (20.0%) |
| Decreased 1%-25% | 135 (6.8%) | 55 (20.4%) | 16 (2.3%) | 14 (9.7%) | 4 (6.0%) | 6 (1.4%) | 39 (11.9%) | 1 (3.3%) |
| Stayed about the same | 140 (7.1%) | 30 (11.2%) | 13 (1.8%) | 15 (10.4%) | 7 (10.4%) | 8 (1.8%) | 65 (19.8%) | 2 (6.7%) |
| Increased 1%-25% | 34 (1.7%) | 13 (4.8%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 10 (14.9%) | 0 (0.0%) | 10 (3.0%) | 1 (3.3%) |
| Increased 25%-50% | 24 (1.2%) | 6 (2.2%) | 1 (0.1%) | 0 (0.0%) | 11 (16.4%) | 4 (0.9%) | 2 (0.6%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Increased > 50% | 25 (1.3%) | 1 (0.4%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 22 (32.6%) | 1 (0.2%) | 1 (0.3%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Yes | 1359 (66.4%) | 116 (41.9%) | 596 (82.4%) | 83 (55.0%) | 2 (2.9%) | 357 (76.8%) | 192 (58.0%) | 13 (40.6%)* |
| Temporary work leave, but still employed (with/without government support)* | 1011 (49.1%) | 70 (25.2%) | 454 (62.4%) | 105 (68.6%) | 4 (5.8%) | 269 (57.6%) | 96 (28.9%) | 13 (40.6%) |
| Decreased work hours and/or income* | 627 (30.5%) | 106 (38.1%) | 239 (32.9%) | 38 (24.8%) | 9 (13.0%) | 122 (26.1%) | 104 (31.3%) | 9 (28.1%) |
| Complete loss of employment* | 324 (15.7%) | 22 (7.9%) | 180 (24.8%) | 13 (8.5%) | 1 (1.4%) | 69 (14.8%) | 36 (10.8%) | 3 (9.4%) |
| No substantial changes* | 298 (14.5%) | 80 (28.8%) | 33 (4.5%) | 20 (13.1%) | 49 (71.0%) | 11 (2.4%) | 103 (31.0%) | 2 (6.3%) |
| Not relevant (as no other practice staff)* | 352 (17.1%) | 45 (16.2%) | 92 (12.7%) | 15 (9.8%) | 7 (10.1%) | 127 (27.2%) | 54 (16.2%) | 12 (37.5%) |
| Increased disinfecting/cleaning of practice equipment/areas* | 1413 (68.3%) | 204 (73.1%) | 533 (73.3%) | 119 (77.8%) | 43 (62.3%) | 303 (64.9%) | 186 (55.9%) | 20 (62.5%) |
| Greater use of hand sanitiser* | 1166 (56.6%) | 169 (60.6%) | 458 (63.0%) | 106 (69.3%) | 39 (56.5%) | 247 (52.9%) | 132 (39.6%) | 15 (46.9%) |
| More rescheduling of patients with flu-like symptoms* | 1066 (51.7%) | 145 (52.0%) | 447 (61.5%) | 90 (58.8%) | 14 (20.3%) | 234 (50.1%) | 122 (36.6%) | 14 (43.8%) |
| Greater use of (PPE)* | 740 (35.9%) | 69 (24.7%) | 319 (43.9%) | 38 (24.8%) | 32 (46.4%) | 187 (40.0%) | 88 (25.8%) | 9 (28.1%) |
| More social distancing in reception/treatment areas* | 661 (32.1%) | 91 (32.6%) | 268 (36.9%) | 67 (43.8%) | 20 (29.0%) | 129 (27.6%) | 77 (23.1%) | 9 (28.1%) |
| No changes, back to normal* | 292 (14.2%) | 36 (12.9%) | 71 (9.8%) | 12 (7.8%) | 22 (31.9%) | 69 (14.8%) | 75 (22.5%) | 7 (21.9%) |
| More teleconferencing/telehealth patient care* | 242 (11.7%) | 21 (7.5%) | 83 (11.4%) | 10 (6.5%) | 4 (5.8%) | 72 (15.4%) | 50 (15.0%) | 2 (6.3%) |
| Unsure of changes after the pandemic is over* | 249 (12.1%) | 23 (8.2%) | 85 (11.7%) | 8 (5.2%) | 3 (4.3%) | 72 (15.4%) | 54 (16.2%) | 4 (12.5%) |
*P < 0.001
Differences in characteristics between chiropractors practising under a musculoskeletal spine-care paradigm versus subluxation-based paradigm (n = 2061; 95.1% of all respondents)
| Characteristics | Musculoskeletal spine-care n = 1388 | Subluxation-based care |
|---|---|---|
| Mean age (SD) years* | 46.7 ± (11.8) | 49.1 ± 12.1 |
| Years of practice (years)* | 18.8 ± 11.3 | 21.2 ± 11.6 |
| Degree (e.g., Master’s or PhD)* | 1388 (27) | 573 (22) |
| Sole Proprietor* | 1386 (22) | 573 (33) |
| Working with other chiropractors/osteopaths* | 1386 (58) | 573 (49) |
| Working with general practitioners/medical specialists# | 1387 (11) | 573 (7) |
| Working with allied health practitioners* | 1386 (34) | 573 (18) |
| Working with complementary healthcare practitioners* | 1387 (55) | 573 (41) |
| Protective screen added at the reception desk* | 1384 (62) | 568 (51) |
| Social distancing with patient seating in the reception and/or treatment area* | 1384 (90) | 568 (87) |
| Changes to the spacing of patient bookings* | 1384 (82) | 568 (73) |
| Care restricted to emergency/urgent cases only* | 1384 (43) | 568 (31) |
| Patient care was stopped* | 1384 (42) | 568 (25) |
| No necessity to wear protective clothing* | 1386 (35) | 573 (27) |
| Implementing some/all advised PPE for chiropractors* | 1363 (94) | 563 (90) |
| Wearing a cloth/standard surgical mask* | 1386 (84) | 571 (79) |
| No necessity to wear an N95 respirator/mask* | 1387 (95) | 572 (91) |
| No necessity to wear face and/or eye shielding* | 1387 (93) | 572 (86) |
| No necessity to use disposable gloves* (n = vs) | 1387 (96) | 572 (90) |
| Deeming that patients do not need to use any kind of PPE* | 1387 (9) | 572 (14) |
| Implementing some/all advised PPE for patients* | 1352 (87) | 565 (77) |
| No treatment until the patient had negative COVID-19 test results, completed the 14-day quarantine if positive, or had no more flu-like symptoms* | 1385 (97) | 573 (89) |
| Before COVID-19 outbreak* | 1381 (5) | 571 (3) |
| During COVID-19 outbreak* | 1308 (32) | 558 (14) |
| Providing public health education* | 1195 (87) | 421 (74) |
| Providing such education through their practice website* | 1195 (54) | 421 (44) |
| Providing such education through social media# | 1195 (45) | 421 (39) |
| Information from authorities (e.g., national/regional government, chiropractic associations, World Health Organization, chiropractic registration/regulation boards)* | 1368 (94) | 556 (84) |
| In favour of independent guidelines* | 1385 (46) | 570 (31) |
| Decreased as compared to before the outbreak* | 1385 (97) | 573 (86) |
| The same or increased as compared to before the outbreak* | 1332 (9) | 558 (17) |
| Yes* | 1381 (70) | 568 (59) |
| Temporary leave from work but still employed* | 1385 (53) | 573 (41) |
| Decreased work hours/income* | 1385 (32) | 573 (26) |
| No substantial changes* | 1385 (10) | 573 (24) |
| No change* | 1387 (9) | 573 (27) |
| Increased disinfecting/cleaning of practice equipment/area* | 1387 (74) | 573 (56) |
| Greater use of PPE* | 1387 (42) | 573 (25) |
| Greater use of hand sanitiser* | 1387 (63) | 573 (43) |
| More social distancing in reception and/or treatment areas* | 1387 (36% | 573 (25) |
| More rescheduling if patients have flu-like symptoms* | 1387 (59) | 573 (36) |
| More teleconferencing/telehealth patient care* | 1387 (14) | 573 (5) |
All survey items demonstrating significant between-group differences: *P < 0.01; # P < 0.05
Factors associated with chiropractors practising under a musculoskeletal spine-care paradigm identified from multivariable logistic regression
| Factors | Unadjusted odds ratio (95% CI) | Adjusted odds ratio (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|
| Age (increase per additional year) | 0.97 (0.96, 0.98) | 0.99 (0.97, 1.00) |
| Sole practitioner | 0.51 (0.40, 0.65) | 0.64 (0.46, 0.90) |
| Working with medical doctors/specialists | 2.24 (1.39, 3.63) | 2.19 (1.05, 4.56) |
| Working with allied health practitioners | 3.45 (2.53, 4.71) | 1.94 (1.35, 2.78) |
| Believing government/health regulator advised the need for chiropractors to wear protective clothing | 1.67 (1.28, 2.19) | 1.56 (1.04, 2.34) |
| Implemented some/all government/health regulator advice on practitioner PPE use | 1.94 (1.25, 2.98) | 2.59 (1.32, 5.08) |
| Believing government/health regulator advised the need for patient use of standard surgical masks | 1.69 (1.25, 2.30) | 2.10 (1.04, 4.22) |
| Believing health regulator advised the need for patients to wear face and/or eye shielding | 0.60 (0.41, 0.87) | 0.47 (0.29, 0.76) |
| Implemented some/all government/health regulator advice on patient PPE use | 2.36 (1.73, 3.21) | 3.25 (1.57, 6.74) |
| No treatment until the patient had negative COVID-19 test results, completed the 14-day quarantine, or no more flu-like symptoms | 4.73 (2.97, 7.54) | 2.16 (1.18, 3.95) |
| Increased face-to-face care during the peak COVID-19 | 0.26 (0.16, 0.42) | 0.36 (0.20, 0.65) |
| Initiate patient telehealth in response to COVID-19 | 3.26 (2.36, 4.50) | 1.46 (1.02, 2.08) |
| Yes | 2.11 (1.64, 2.71) | 1.33 (1.00, 1.76) |
| Government reports/websites, World Health Organization, Chiropractic Registration Boards/Professional associations | 3.05 (2.16, 4.31) | 2.47 (1.49, 4.10) |
| No substantial change in their employment | 0.41 (0.30, 0.55) | 0.59 (0.39, 0.89) |
All analyses are adjusted for country and age