C. Worsfold et al., COMPARISON BETWEEN PRIMARY-CARE PHYSIOTHERAPY EDUCATION ADVICE CLINICS AND TRADITIONAL HOSPITAL-BASED PHYSIOTHERAPY TREATMENT - A RANDOMIZED TRIAL, British journal of general practice, 46(404), 1996, pp. 165-168
Background. Studies have shown that patients prefer to received physio
therapy services in the primary care setting, but none has made direct
comparisons between hospital and primary care based physiotherapy. Ai
m. This pragmatic randomized trial set out to compare general-practice
-based physiotherapy education and advice clinics with traditional phy
siotherapy treatment in an acute hospital setting. Method. The study i
nvolved 130 patients referred to physiotherapy services by 43 general
practitioners over a one-year period. Patients were included in the st
udy if they were at work, independent in all activities of daily livin
g and would have routinely been referred to the hospital physiotherapy
department for treatment. Patients were randomly allocated to one of
two intervention groups: general practice education/advice, or treatme
nt and education/advice at the local hospital. Patients completed a qu
estionnaire prior to their first physiotherapy appointment and again 6
weeks later. Results. A disappointing number of patients failed to at
tend either the first or subsequent appointments. The post-interventio
n scores revealed improvements in patients' problems, with the advice
group exhibiting a slightly better outcome than the hospital group, as
measured by the Nottingham health profile, the anxiety component of t
he hospital anxiety and depression rating scale, pain and problem size
visual analogue scales, and measures of patient satisfaction. Advice
group patients also had less attendances than the hospital treatment g
roup. The general practitioners surveyed commented favourably on the a
dvice clinics. Conclusion. The findings of this study justify the conc
ept of general-practice-based physiotherapy education and advice clini
cs.