The University of Sydney, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
The University of Queensland, School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2021 Jul 9;22(1):611. doi: 10.1186/s12891-021-04479-z.
Although many people with chronic low back pain (LBP) improve following conservative treatment, one in five will experience worsening symptoms after discharge from treatment and seek health care again. The current LBP clinical care pathway in many health services lacks a well-integrated, systematic approach to support patients to remain physically active and self-manage their symptoms following discharge from treatment. Health coaching can support people to improve physical activity levels and may potentially reduce health care utilisation for LBP. The primary aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of introducing a coordinated support system (linking hospital outpatient physiotherapy services to a public health coaching service) at discharge from LBP treatment, on the future use of hospital, medical, and health services for LBP, compared with usual care provided at discharge.
Three hundred and seventy-four adults with chronic non-specific LBP will be recruited from the outpatient physiotherapy departments of public hospitals in New South Wales, Australia. Participants will be individually randomised to a support system (n = 187) or usual care group (n = 187). All participants will receive usual care provided at discharge from treatment. Participants allocated to the support system will also receive up to 10 telephone-based health coaching sessions, delivered by the Get Healthy Service®, over a 6-month period. Health coaches will monitor and support participants to improve physical activity levels and achieve personal health-related goals. The primary outcome is the total number of encounters with hospital, medical, and health services for LBP, at 12 months from baseline. A within-trial economic evaluation will quantify the incremental costs and benefits of the support system from a health system perspective, to support reimbursement decision making.
This study will establish the effect of a coordinated support system, introduced at discharge from treatment, on the future use of hospital, medical, and health services for LBP and various health outcomes.
Innovative community-driven solutions to support people with chronic LBP after discharge from treatment are urgently needed. Study findings will help inform health care policy and clinical practice in Australia.
Prospectively registered on the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry ( ACTRN12620000889954 ) on 10/09/2020.
尽管许多慢性下背痛 (LBP) 患者在接受保守治疗后有所改善,但仍有五分之一的患者在治疗出院后症状恶化,并再次寻求医疗保健。目前,许多卫生服务机构的 LBP 临床护理路径缺乏一种综合、系统的方法,无法为患者提供支持,使其在治疗出院后保持身体活跃并自我管理症状。健康教练可以帮助人们提高身体活动水平,并且可能潜在地减少 LBP 的医疗保健利用。本研究的主要目的是评估在 LBP 治疗出院时引入协调支持系统(将医院门诊物理治疗服务与公共健康教练服务联系起来)对未来使用医院、医疗和卫生服务治疗 LBP 的效果,与出院时提供的常规护理相比。
将从澳大利亚新南威尔士州公立医院的门诊物理治疗部门招募 374 名患有慢性非特异性 LBP 的成年人。参与者将被单独随机分配到支持系统(n=187)或常规护理组(n=187)。所有参与者将在治疗出院时接受常规护理。分配到支持系统的参与者还将在 6 个月内接受多达 10 次基于电话的健康教练课程,由 Get Healthy Service®提供。健康教练将监测和支持参与者提高身体活动水平并实现个人与健康相关的目标。主要结局是从基线开始的 12 个月内,LBP 医院、医疗和卫生服务的总就诊次数。一项试验内的经济评估将从卫生系统的角度量化支持系统的增量成本和收益,以支持报销决策。
本研究将确定治疗出院时引入的协调支持系统对未来使用医院、医疗和卫生服务治疗 LBP 以及各种健康结果的影响。
迫切需要创新的社区驱动解决方案来支持治疗后慢性 LBP 患者。研究结果将有助于为澳大利亚的医疗保健政策和临床实践提供信息。
2020 年 9 月 10 日在澳大利亚新西兰临床试验注册中心(ACTRN12620000889954)前瞻性注册。