Division of Preventive Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Osher Center for Integrative Health, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 Jan 23;24(1):125. doi: 10.1186/s12913-024-10578-z.
Healthcare systems (HCS) are challenged in adopting and sustaining comprehensive approaches to spine care that require coordination and collaboration among multiple service units. The integration of clinicians who provide first line, evidence-based, non-pharmacological therapies further complicates adoption of these care pathways. This cross-sectional study explored clinician perceptions about the integration of guideline-concordant care and optimal spine care workforce requirements within an academic HCS.
Spine care clinicians from Duke University Health System (DUHS) completed a 26-item online survey via Qualtrics on barriers and facilitators to delivering guideline concordant care for low back pain patients. Data analysis included descriptive statistics and qualitative content analysis.
A total of 27 clinicians (57% response) responded to one or more items on the questionnaire, with 23 completing the majority of questions. Respondents reported that guidelines were implementable within DUHS, but no spine care guideline was used consistently across provider types. Guideline access and integration with electronic records were barriers to use. Respondents (81%) agreed most patients would benefit from non-pharmacological therapies such as physical therapy or chiropractic before receiving specialty referrals. Providers perceived spine patients expected diagnostic imaging (81%) and medication (70%) over non-pharmacological therapies. Providers agreed that receiving imaging (63%) and opioids (59%) benchmarks could be helpful but might not change their ordering practice, even if nudged by best practice advisories. Participants felt that an optimal spine care workforce would require more chiropractors and primary care providers and fewer neurosurgeons and orthopedists. In qualitative responses, respondents emphasized the following barriers to guideline-concordant care implementation: patient expectations, provider confidence with referral pathways, timely access, and the appropriate role of spine surgery.
Spine care clinicians had positive support for current tenets of guideline-concordant spine care for low back pain patients. However, significant barriers to implementation were identified, including mixed opinions about integration of non-pharmacological therapies, referral pathways, and best practices for imaging and opioid use.
医疗保健系统(HCS)在采用和维持需要多个服务单元协调和协作的全面脊柱护理方法方面面临挑战。整合提供一线、基于证据的非药物治疗方法的临床医生进一步使这些护理途径的采用复杂化。这项横断面研究探讨了临床医生对在学术 HCS 中整合符合指南的护理和最佳脊柱护理劳动力需求的看法。
杜克大学健康系统(DUHS)的脊柱护理临床医生通过 Qualtrics 在线完成了一份包含 26 个项目的调查,内容涉及提供低腰痛患者符合指南的护理的障碍和促进因素。数据分析包括描述性统计和定性内容分析。
共有 27 名临床医生(57%的回复率)对问卷的一个或多个项目做出了回应,其中 23 名临床医生完成了大部分问题。受访者报告说,指南在 DUHS 内是可实施的,但没有一种脊柱护理指南在所有提供者类型中都得到一致使用。指南的获取和与电子记录的整合是使用的障碍。81%的受访者同意大多数患者在接受专业转介之前会受益于物理治疗或脊医等非药物治疗。提供者认为脊柱患者期望接受影像学检查(81%)和药物治疗(70%)而不是非药物治疗。提供者一致认为,接受影像学检查(63%)和阿片类药物(59%)基准可能会有所帮助,但即使最佳实践建议促使他们这样做,也可能不会改变他们的开单习惯。参与者认为,最佳的脊柱护理劳动力将需要更多的脊医和初级保健提供者,以及更少的神经外科医生和骨科医生。在定性回复中,受访者强调了实施符合指南的护理的以下障碍:患者的期望、提供者对转诊途径的信心、及时获得以及脊柱手术的适当作用。
脊柱护理临床医生对目前符合低腰痛患者指南的脊柱护理原则持积极支持态度。然而,确定了实施的重大障碍,包括对整合非药物治疗、转诊途径以及影像学和阿片类药物使用的最佳实践的意见不一。