J.H. Roberts, MD, Division of Rheumatology and Department of Medicine, Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre, Halifax, Nova Scotia, and Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, and Arthritis Research Canada, Richmond, British Columbia;
C. Gunn, BSc, PT, J.E. Mackinnon, BSc, PT, S. Parlee BSc, PT, Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre, Halifax, Nova Scotia.
J Rheumatol. 2024 Jul 1;51(7):715-720. doi: 10.3899/jrheum.2023-1071.
Given global shortages in the rheumatology workforce, the demand for rheumatology assessment often exceeds the capacity to provide timely access to care. Accurate triage of patient referrals is important to ensure appropriate utilization of finite resources. We assessed the feasibility of physiotherapist (PT)-led triage using a standardized protocol in identifying cases of inflammatory arthritis (IA), as compared to usual rheumatologist triage of referrals for joint pain, in a tertiary care rheumatology clinic.
We performed a single-center, prospective, nonblinded, randomized, parallel-group feasibility study with referrals randomized in a 1:1 ratio to either PT-led vs usual rheumatologist triage. Standardized information was collected at referral receipt, triage, and clinic visit. Rheumatologist diagnosis was considered the gold standard for diagnosis of IA.
One hundred two referrals were randomized to the PT-led triage arm and 101 to the rheumatologist arm. In the PT-led arm, 65% of referrals triaged as urgent were confirmed to have IA vs 60% in the rheumatologist arm ( = 0.57), suggesting similar accuracy in identifying IA. More referrals were declined in the PT-led triage arm (24 vs 8, = 0.002), resulting in fewer referrals triaged as semiurgent (6 vs 23, = 0.003). One case of IA (rheumatologist arm) was incorrectly triaged, resulting in significant delay in time to first assessment.
PT-led triage was feasible, appeared as reliable as rheumatologist triage of referrals for joint pain, and led to significantly fewer patients requiring in-clinic visits. This has implications for waitlist management and optimal rheumatology resource utilization.
鉴于全球风湿病学劳动力短缺,对风湿病学评估的需求经常超过及时提供护理的能力。准确分诊患者转诊对于确保有限资源的合理利用非常重要。我们评估了在一家三级保健风湿病诊所中,使用标准化方案由物理治疗师(PT)进行分诊与常规由风湿病医生对关节痛转诊进行分诊相比,在识别炎症性关节炎(IA)病例方面的可行性。
我们进行了一项单中心、前瞻性、非盲、随机、平行组可行性研究,将转诊患者按 1:1 的比例随机分配到 PT 主导的分诊组或常规风湿病医生分诊组。在转诊时、分诊时和就诊时收集标准化信息。风湿病医生的诊断被认为是 IA 诊断的金标准。
102 例转诊被随机分配到 PT 主导的分诊组,101 例被随机分配到风湿病医生组。在 PT 主导的分诊组中,65%的紧急转诊被确认为 IA,而在风湿病医生组中为 60%( = 0.57),表明在识别 IA 方面具有相似的准确性。PT 主导的分诊组中有更多的转诊被拒绝(24 比 8, = 0.002),导致需要半紧急分诊的转诊减少(6 比 23, = 0.003)。1 例 IA(在风湿病医生组)被错误分诊,导致首次评估时间显著延迟。
PT 主导的分诊是可行的,与风湿病医生对关节痛转诊的分诊一样可靠,并显著减少了需要就诊的患者数量。这对候诊管理和优化风湿病学资源利用具有重要意义。