Peters D, Davies P, Pietroni P
Marylebone Health Centre, London.
Br J Gen Pract. 1994 Jan;44(378):25-9.
A musculoskeletal clinic, staffed by a general practitioner trained in osteopathy, medical acupuncture and intralesional injections, was set up in an inner London general practice in 1987.
A retrospective study was undertaken of one year's referrals to the clinic in 1989-90 to determine how general practitioners were using the clinic in terms of problems referred; consultation patterns of patients attending the clinic and 12 months after initially being seen; and how access to the clinic influenced referrals to relevant hospital departments.
Day sheets were studied which recorded information on demographic characteristics of patients referred to the clinic and their problems, diagnoses made, duration of symptoms, number and range of treatments given, and recurrence of problems. Use of secondary referral sources was also examined.
During the study year 154 of 3264 practice patients were referred to the musculoskeletal clinic, and attended a mean of 3.5 times each. Of all the attenders 64% were women and 52% were 30-54 years old. Eighty one patients (53%) presented with neck, back or sciatic pain. A specific traumatic, inflammatory or other pathological process could be ascribed to only 19% of patients. Regarding treatment, 88% of patients received osteopathic manual treatment or acupuncture, or a combination of these treatments and 4% received intralesional injections. Nine patients from the clinic (6%) were referred to an orthopaedic specialist during the year, two with acute back pain. Referrals to orthopaedic specialists by the practice as a whole were not significantly lower than the national average, although the practice made fewer referrals to physiotherapy and rheumatology departments than national figures would have predicted. Seventeen patients (11%) returned to the clinic with a recurrence of their main complaint within a year of their initial appointment; second courses of treatment were usually brief.
The clinic encouraged a relatively low referral rate to musculoskeletal specialists outside the practice. However, a need was identified for better communication about the potential of the approaches used in order that referrals to secondary specialists, particularly orthopaedic specialists, could be further reduced.
1987年,在伦敦市中心的一家普通诊所设立了一家肌肉骨骼诊所,由一名接受过整骨疗法、医学针灸和病灶内注射培训的全科医生坐诊。
对1989 - 1990年转诊至该诊所的患者进行为期一年的回顾性研究,以确定全科医生在转诊问题方面如何利用该诊所;就诊患者的咨询模式以及初次就诊后12个月的情况;以及该诊所的就诊机会如何影响向相关医院科室的转诊。
研究了工作日志,其中记录了转诊至该诊所患者的人口统计学特征及其问题、诊断结果、症状持续时间、所接受治疗的数量和范围以及问题的复发情况。还检查了二级转诊来源的使用情况。
在研究年度,3264名诊所患者中有154人被转诊至肌肉骨骼诊所,平均每人就诊3.5次。在所有就诊者中,64%为女性,52%年龄在30 - 54岁之间。81名患者(53%)表现为颈部、背部或坐骨神经痛。仅19%的患者可归因于特定的创伤、炎症或其他病理过程。关于治疗,88%的患者接受了整骨手法治疗或针灸,或两者结合,4%的患者接受了病灶内注射。该年度有9名诊所患者(6%)被转诊至骨科专家处,其中两名患有急性背痛。尽管该诊所转诊至理疗和风湿科的患者数量低于全国数据预期,但整个诊所转诊至骨科专家的比例并不显著低于全国平均水平。17名患者(11%)在初次就诊后一年内因主要症状复发返回诊所;第二疗程的治疗通常较为简短。
该诊所促使转诊至诊所外肌肉骨骼专科医生的比例相对较低。然而,发现需要更好地沟通所采用方法的潜力,以便进一步减少向二级专科医生,特别是骨科专家的转诊。