Centre for Health, Exercise and Sports Medicine, Department of Physiotherapy, School of Health Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Menzies Centre for Health Policy, Sydney School of Public Health, The University of Sydney, Australia; Sydney School of Public Health, The University of Sydney, Australia.
Osteoarthritis Cartilage. 2018 Jul;26(7):888-894. doi: 10.1016/j.joca.2018.03.013. Epub 2018 Apr 12.
To document the management of foot/ankle osteoarthritis/arthritis (OA) by general practitioners (GP) in Australia.
We analysed data from the Bettering the Evaluation and Care of Health Program April 2010-March 2016 inclusive. Patient and GP encounter characteristics were extracted. Data were classified by the International Classification of Primary Care, Version 2, and summarised using descriptive statistics and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) around point estimates.
The dataset included 583,900 patient-encounter records among which foot/ankle OA was managed 621 times, at a rate of 1.1 per 1000 encounters, with an annual estimated 152,000 GP encounters nationally. The management rate was most frequent among patients aged 65-74 years (2.25 per 1000 encounters). Comorbidities were managed at a rate of 105.8 per 100 encounters, the most common being hypertension, and few being other musculoskeletal problems. Foot/ankle OA was mostly managed using medication (64.6 per 100 problems), with prescription rates far exceeding non-pharmacological strategies such as counselling, advice or education (17.7 per 100), or allied health referral (10.1 per 100). When considering specific health/medical professionals, patients were referred to orthopaedic surgeons 8.4 times per 100 foot/ankle problems, podiatrists 6.3 times per 100 foot/ankle problems, and physiotherapists 2.6 times per 100 foot/ankle problems.
Pharmacological management rates of foot/ankle OA were high and substantially exceeded non-pharmacological management such as lifestyle advice and allied health referral. Longitudinal studies are needed to determine the effectiveness of this care compared to self-management and conservative non-drug treatment in people with foot/ankle OA.
记录澳大利亚全科医生(GP)对足部/踝关节骨关节炎/关节炎(OA)的管理情况。
我们分析了 2010 年 4 月至 2016 年 3 月期间 Bettering the Evaluation and Care of Health Program 的数据。提取患者和 GP 就诊特征。根据国际初级保健分类第二版对数据进行分类,并使用描述性统计和 95%置信区间(95%CI)对点估计值进行总结。
数据集包括 583900 例患者就诊记录,其中足部/踝关节 OA 管理记录 621 次,发生率为每 1000 次就诊 1.1 次,全国每年估计有 152000 次 GP 就诊。65-74 岁患者的管理率最高(每 1000 次就诊 2.25 次)。共病的管理率为每 100 次就诊 105.8 次,最常见的是高血压,很少有其他肌肉骨骼问题。足部/踝关节 OA 主要采用药物治疗(每 100 个问题 64.6 次),处方率远高于非药物治疗策略,如咨询、建议或教育(每 100 次 17.7 次)或联合健康转诊(每 100 次 10.1 次)。在考虑特定的医疗/医疗专业人员时,每 100 个足部/踝关节问题患者会被转诊给骨科医生 8.4 次,足病医生 6.3 次,物理治疗师 2.6 次。
足部/踝关节 OA 的药物治疗率较高,大大超过了生活方式建议和联合健康转诊等非药物治疗。需要进行纵向研究,以确定与自我管理和保守的非药物治疗相比,这种治疗在足部/踝关节 OA 患者中的有效性。