Adherence to low back pain clinical guidelines in Australian hospital emergency departments: A public and private comparison

Claire L. Samanna, Paul Buntine, Daniel L. Belavy, Ron V. Sultana, Clint T. Miller, Vasilios (Bill) Nimorakiotakis, Patrick J. Owen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Managing LBP via clinical practice guidelines in healthcare settings is recommended, yet burgeoning evidence suggests adherence is suboptimal in emergency department settings. Whether adherence differs between public and private settings is unknown. A retrospective audit of two Australian emergency departments matched 86 private patients to 86 public patients by age (± 5 years), sex (male/female) and LBP duration (first time/history of LBP). Patient charts were reviewed according to the Australian clinical guidelines for the management of LBP. Guidelines were considered individually and via a collective guideline adherence score (GAS). Management GAS was lower in private patients compared to public patients (d [95 %CI]: −0.67 [−0.98, −0.36], P < 0.001). Public patients were more likely to have documentation of guideline-based advice (OR [95 %CI]: 4.4 [2.4, 8.4], P < 0.001) and less likely to be sent for imaging (OR [95 %CI]: 5.0 [2.6, 9.4], P < 0.001). Private patients were more likely to have documented screening for psychosocial risk factors (OR [95 %CI]: 21.8 [9.1, 52.1], P < 0.001) and more likely to receive guideline-based medication prescriptions at patient discharge (OR [95 %CI]: 2.2 [1.2, 4.2], P = 0.013). Differences exist in public and private hospital emergency department guideline adherence. Exploring barriers and facilitators underpinning these differences will assist in guiding future implementation science approaches.

Original languageEnglish
Number of pages6
JournalAustralasian Emergency Care
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2024

Keywords

  • Emergency department
  • Guideline adherence
  • Low back pain
  • Private hospital
  • Public hospital

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