Management of low back pain in general practice - is it of acceptable quality: an observational study among 25 general practices in South Tyrol (Italy).
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to analyze the management of low back pain (LBP) in Italian General Practice, including the use of massage as part of physiotherapy, and compare it with guideline recommendations.
Results Summary
The study found that 17.1% of patients with LBP were prescribed physiotherapy, mostly massage, but adherence to guidelines by GPs was inconsistent, with only about 50% partially following them.
Population
Patients visiting Italian General Practitioners for low back pain (acute lumbar pain, chronic lumbar pain, acute sciatica, chronic sciatica).
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Patients were monitored for at least four weeks, but the duration of massage therapy was not specified.
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NSAID | neutral | medication for low back pain | patients complaining of low back pain | 88.3% | was prescribed | #1 |
Paracetamol | neutral | medication for low back pain | patients complaining of low back pain | 6.3% | was prescribed | #2 |
Paracetamol combined with Codeine | neutral | medication for low back pain | patients complaining of low back pain | 10.4% | was prescribed | #3 |
muscle relaxants | neutral | medication for low back pain | patients complaining of low back pain | 9% | was prescribed | #4 |
physiotherapy | neutral | treatment for low back pain | patients complaining of low back pain | 17.1% | was prescribed | #5 |
massage | neutral | physiotherapy for low back pain | patients complaining of low back pain | - | was prescribed | #6 |
General Practitioner management | decrease | adherence to guidelines for low back pain | Italian General Practice | - | reveals gross deviations | #7 |
General Practitioner management | neutral | locally established guidelines for low back pain | General Practitioners | Hardly more than 50% | partially followed | #8 |
BACKGROUND: There are several guidelines dealing with the management of low back pain (LBP), but only few studies on the quality of care provided within General Practices as judged against those guidelines.The objective of this study is to analyse the management of LBP in Italian General Practice and compare it with guideline recommendations. METHODS: In this observational study, all patients visiting their General Practitioners (GPs) for treatment of LBP within a 8-week period were monitored for at least four weeks with regard to symptoms and diagnostic and therapeutic interventions. Management of LBP was judged by pre-defined quality indicators based on guideline recommendations. RESULTS: Twenty-five of 114 eligible GPs participated in the study, representing a total of 43,012 registered patients. Of the 475 patients complaining of LBP and monitored for four weeks, 55.8% were diagnosed as having acute lumbar pain, 13.5% chronic lumbar pain, 17.1% acute sciatica, and 12.6% chronic sciatica; 76.0% underwent no technical investigations, 21.7% underwent x-rays, 5.5% MRI and 4% CT scans; 20.4% were referred to secondary care; 93.3% of all patients received some medication. In those receiving a medication, in 88.3% it was an NSAID, in 6.3% Paracetamol, in 10.4% Paracetamol combined with Codeine, and in 9% a muscle relaxants. When physiotherapy was prescribed (17,1%), it was mostly massage. Hardly more than 50% of GPs (partially) followed locally established guidelines, while the remainder seemed not to follow guidelines at all. CONCLUSIONS: Our study reveals gross deviations of GP management of LBP from current guidelines and points to two different types of deviators: those who partially follow guidelines, and those who do not follow them at all. Further research should evaluate whether these two types of deviation are best addressed by different foci of education, i.e. on knowledge versus attitudes, respectively.