Arthritis Research UK Primary Care Centre, Keele University, Keele, Staffordshire, UK.
Clin J Pain. 2010 Nov-Dec;26(9):783-7. doi: 10.1097/AJP.0b013e3181f18aac.
The STarT Back Screening Tool (SBST) is validated to subgroup primary care patients with back pain into risk groups relevant to initial decision-making. However, it remains unclear how the tool's allocation of individuals compares with subjective clinical decision-making. We evaluated agreement between clinicians and the SBST's allocation to risk subgroups, and explored reasons for differences observed.
Twelve primary care back pain patients underwent a video-recorded clinical assessment. The SBST was completed on the same day. Clinical experts (3 general practitioners, 3 physiotherapists, and 3 pain management specialists) individually reviewed the patient videos (4 each), blind to SBST allocation. Their task was to subgroup patients into low, medium, or high-risk groups.
Interrater agreement between clinicians was "fair" (κ=0.28), with consistent allocation between experts in 4 of 12 patients. There was observed agreement with the SBST in 17 of 36 cases (47%) and Cohen's weighted κ was 0.22, indicating fair agreement. Two reasons for differences emerged. Clinicians tailor their decisions according to patient expectations and demands for treatment and clinicians use knowledge of difficult life circumstances that may be unrelated back pain.
Clinicians make inconsistent risk estimations for primary care patients with back pain when using intuition alone, with little agreement with a formal subgrouping tool. Unlike clinicians, the SBST could not make a sophisticated synthesis of patient preferences, expectations, and previous treatment history. Although acknowledging the limitations of back pain subgrouping tools, more research is needed to test whether their use improves consistency in primary care decision-making.
STarT Back Screening Tool(SBST)经过验证,可以将初级保健患者的腰痛分为与初始决策相关的风险组。然而,目前尚不清楚该工具对个体的分配与主观临床决策之间的比较如何。我们评估了临床医生与 SBST 分配到风险亚组之间的一致性,并探讨了观察到的差异的原因。
12 名初级保健腰痛患者接受了视频记录的临床评估。同一天完成了 SBST。临床专家(3 名全科医生、3 名物理治疗师和 3 名疼痛管理专家)分别查看了 4 名患者的视频(每人 4 名),对 SBST 分配情况不知情。他们的任务是将患者分为低、中、高风险组。
临床医生之间的评分者间一致性为“一般”(κ=0.28),在 12 名患者中有 4 名专家的分配一致。在 36 例中有 17 例(47%)与 SBST 观察结果一致,Cohen 的加权 κ 为 0.22,表明一致性一般。有两个原因导致了差异。临床医生根据患者的期望和对治疗的需求以及可能与腰痛无关的困难生活环境的知识来调整他们的决策。
当单独使用直觉时,临床医生对初级保健腰痛患者做出不一致的风险估计,与正式的亚组工具几乎没有一致性。与临床医生不同,SBST 无法对患者的偏好、期望和先前的治疗史进行复杂的综合。尽管承认腰痛亚组工具的局限性,但仍需要更多的研究来检验它们的使用是否能提高初级保健决策的一致性。