Temple University Employees With Musculoskeletal Conditions Receive Physical Therapy to Treat Limitations Early
- Conditions
- Musculoskeletal Diseases
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Physician managementBehavioral: Early Direct Access Physical Therapy
- Registration Number
- NCT02272257
- Lead Sponsor
- Temple University
- Brief Summary
The purpose of this study is to determine whether seeing a physical therapist first compared with seeing a physician first is more clinically and cost effective in an occupational setting for acute musculoskeletal conditions.
- Detailed Description
Traditionally, when individuals sustain a musculoskeletal injury and require physical therapy intervention, a referral is obtained from a physician to prescribe therapy. Currently, for non-work related injuries, 48 out of the 50 United States are "direct access physical therapy states" meaning a consumer can be evaluated and treated by a physical therapist directly without physician referral. The number of direct access states is much less for work-related injuries, with only 17 of the 50 United States practice acts permitting direct access, and of these, most insurance companies still require a physician referral for reimbursement. A previous systematic review of the literature on this topic suggests that requiring a referral is associated with more drug prescriptions, more imaging ordered, and higher costs to the patient and health care system with no advantage in health outcomes. However, the cited studies were of low quality (i.e. below Level 1 evidence), so a high quality study with strict experimental controls is still necessary.
This project proposes to conduct a blinded randomized controlled trial to determine if a "direct access physical therapy portal of entry" is more effective than a "physician portal of entry" in decreasing total episode cost and improving outcomes for individuals with a recent onset of musculoskeletal conditions. The project's definition of musculoskeletal pain is any "mechanical" spine or extremity pain from either a work condition (workers compensation) or a non-work related condition. The project investigators plan to recruit potential subjects directly from Temple University employees and supervisors. Subjects who consent to and pass a baseline screening will be randomized to one of two groups: direct access physical therapy management or Employee Health physician management. All PT and physician providers will be "study providers". Subjects randomized to direct access physical therapy will be evaluated and treated by a physical therapist. If the presentation requires further work up, the therapist will refer the patient for imaging or specialty consult. Subjects randomized to the Employee Health physician will receive a similar evaluation ordering relevant work up, and if appropriate, the physician will refer the patient to a physical therapist. Health outcomes for the two groups will be compared with a mixed-model repeated measures analysis at 1 month after enrollment. Total episode cost and medical utilization will be compared at one year after enrollment.
If this direct access "Temple University model" is feasible and effective for managing compensated and non-compensated musculoskeletal conditions, it could serve as a paradigm for other universities to implement across the United States. Furthermore, this study would be the first data set in the literature that studied a physical therapy direct access model for evaluation and treatment of employees with "workers-compensation" conditions in the United States.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- UNKNOWN
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 150
- Temple University Employees who speak English sufficiently to understand informed consent.
- Has a primary complaint that is potentially of neuro-musculoskeletal origin. This is defined by a primary complaint of pain, numbness, or decreased function due to symptoms within regions of spine, shoulder, elbow, wrist/hand pain, pelvic/SI, hip, knee, or ankle pain, temporomandibular joint pain, or headaches. The complaint could be work related (workers compensation) or non-work related. This definition does not include abrasions, contusions, etc. that result in pain but do not affect the employee's function.
- Age greater than or equal to 18 years old.
- Employee's primary complaint began ≤3 months upon initial study screening. This could include a recent exacerbation (within ≤3 months onset) of a condition with a history of previous episodes. If the patient reports more than one complaint, all complaints will be addressed in the study with intervention that began within the ≤3 month timeframe.
- Met with another medical provider for advice for the condition prior to study enrollment (including physical therapist, chiropractor, physician, surgeon, physician-assistant, or nurse, etc.).
- Medical history of surgery for a prior episode of complaint.
- Any major psychiatric disease in their past medical history.
- Red flags cannot be ruled out during the medical screening examination (e.g., cauda equina compression, inflammatory arthritis, malignancy, fracture, serious illness or comorbidity). Any musculoskeletal injuries that can be managed by a physical therapist will not be excluded (radiculopathy, potential ACL tear, peripheral nerve entrapments, etc.)
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- FACTORIAL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Physician management Physician management All usual care by physician will be administered by one or more employee health physicians employed by Temple University. Recommendations may or may not include referral to physical therapy. Early Direct Access Physical Therapy Early Direct Access Physical Therapy All care will be administered by one or more physical therapists employed by Temple University. This arm will be early, direct access, physical therapy (immediately evaluation following contacting the front desk administrator or reporting a work injury). Intervention will include interventions matched to their stratified risk category incorporating biopsychosocially oriented education, therapeutic exercise, and manual therapy tailored to the patient's needs.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Total Episode Cost and codes billed affecting cost 1 year post study enrollment Reimbursed amounts related to initial presenting condition of interest including physical therapy, diagnostics, and all medical interventions (Medication prescriptions, physical therapy visits, physician office visits, specialty visits, imaging ordered, injections performed, number of surgeries performed)
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method PROMIS, 10 item-Physical Function Questionnaire 1 month post enrollement Self report questionnaire to assess function, quality of life
Pain Self-efficacy questionnaire (PSEQ) 1 month post enrollment Self-report standardized questionnaire, Theorized mediator
Harm 1 month post enrollment complaints voiced to the Workers Compensation Director, adverse events reported in the chart (defined as an undesirable result of the PT evaluation, diagnosis, or prescribed intervention resulting in any short-term or permanent morbidity unexpected for patients with a like clinical presentation), and litigation claims filed.
Patient-Specific Functional Scale (PSFS) 1 month post enrollment Self report questionnaire (not region specific)
Patient Acceptable Symptom State (PASS) 1 month post enrollment Yes or No response to a written question if their current state is acceptable to patient.
Pain Catastrophizing Score (PCS) 1 month post enrollment Self-report standardized questionnaire, Theorized mediator
Patient Satisfaction 1 month post enrollment Self report rating from 0-10
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Temple University Employee Health
🇺🇸Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States