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Headline
Report finds that providing physiotherapy via the PhysioDirect telemedicine service is equally clinically effective compared with usual waiting list-based care. It provides faster access to treatment, appears to be safe, is broadly acceptable to patients, and is likely to be cost-effective compared with usual care.
Abstract
Background:
As a result of long delays for physiotherapy for musculoskeletal problems, several areas in the UK have introduced PhysioDirect services in which patients telephone a physiotherapist for initial assessment and treatment advice. However, there is no robust evidence about the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness or acceptability to patients of PhysioDirect.
Objective:
To investigate whether or not PhysioDirect is equally as clinically effective as and more cost-effective than usual care for patients with musculoskeletal (MSK) problems in primary care.
Design:
Pragmatic randomised controlled trial to assess equivalence, incorporating economic evaluation and nested qualitative research. Patients were randomised in 2 : 1 ratio to PhysioDirect or usual care using a remote automated allocation system at the level of the individual, stratifying by physiotherapy site and minimising by sex, age group and site of MSK problem. For the economic analysis, cost consequences included NHS and patient costs, and the cost of lost production. Cost-effectiveness analysis was carried out from the perspective of the NHS. Interviews were conducted with patients, physiotherapists and their managers.
Setting:
Four community physiotherapy services in England.
Participants:
Adults referred by general practitioners or self-referred for physiotherapy for a MSK problem.
Interventions:
Patients allocated to PhysioDirect were invited to telephone a senior physiotherapist for initial assessment and advice using a computerised template, followed by face-to-face care when necessary. Patients allocated to usual care were put on to a waiting list for face-to-face care.
Main outcome measures:
Primary outcome was the Short Form questionnaire-36 items, version 2 (SF- 36v2) Physical Component Score (PCS) at 6 months after randomisation. Secondary outcomes included other measures of health outcome [Measure Yourself Medical Outcomes Profile, European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions (EuroQol health utility measure, EQ-5D), global improvement, response to treatment], wait for treatment, time lost from work and usual activities, patient satisfaction. Data were collected by postal questionnaires at baseline, 6 weeks and 6 months, and from routine records by researchers blind to allocation.
Results:
A total of 1506 patients were allocated to PhysioDirect and 743 to usual care. Patients allocated to PhysioDirect had a shorter wait for treatment than those allocated to usual care [median 7 days vs 34 days; arm–time ratio 0.32, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.29 to 0.35] and had fewer non-attended face-to-face appointments [incidence rate ratio 0.55 (95% CI 0.41 to 0.73)]. The primary outcome at 6 months' follow-up was equivalent between PhysioDirect and usual care [mean PCS 43.50 vs 44.18, adjusted difference in means −0.01 (95% CI −0.80 to 0.79)]. The secondary measures of health outcome all demonstrated equivalence at 6 months, with slightly greater improvement in the PhysioDirect arm at 6 weeks' follow-up. Patients were equally satisfied with access to care but slightly less satisfied overall with PhysioDirect compared with usual care. NHS costs (physiotherapy plus other relevant NHS costs) per patient were similar in the two arms [PhysioDirect £198.98 vs usual care £179.68, difference in means £19.30 (95% CI −£37.60 to £76.19)], while QALYs gained were also similar [difference in means 0.007 (95% CI −0.003 to 0.016)]. Incremental cost per QALY gained was £2889. The probability that PhysioDirect was cost-effective at a £20,000 willingness-to-pay threshold was 88%. These conclusions about cost-effectiveness were robust to sensitivity analyses. There was no evidence of difference between trial arms in cost to patients or value of lost production. No adverse events were detected.
Conclusions:
Providing physiotherapy via PhysioDirect is equally clinically effective compared with usual waiting list-based care, provides faster access to treatment, appears to be safe, and is broadly acceptable to patients. PhysioDirect is probably cost-effective compared with usual care.
Trial registration:
Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN55666618.
Funding:
This project was funded by the MRC and was managed by the NIHR (project number 09-800-12) on behalf of the MRC–NIHR partnership and will be published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 17, No. 2. See the HTA programme website for further project information.
Contents
- Executive summary
- Chapter 1. Introduction
- Chapter 2. Randomised controlled trial: methods
- Study design
- Setting
- Participants
- Recruitment of participants
- Randomisation
- Description of intervention and control arms
- Outcome assessment
- Collection of data
- Data entry
- Blinding
- Sample size and power
- Statistical methods
- Economic analysis and qualitative research
- Investigation of adverse events and serious adverse events
- Ethics and research governance approval
- Trial registration
- Summary of changes to the project protocol
- Chapter 3. Randomised controlled trial: results
- Chapter 4. Economic evaluation: methods
- Chapter 5. Economic evaluation: results
- Chapter 6. Qualitative study: methods
- Chapter 7. Qualitative study: results
- Chapter 8. Discussion
- Chapter 9. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix 1 Comparison of baseline characteristics between patients with or without missing primary outcome data
- Appendix 2 Development of patient satisfaction measure
- Appendix 3 Example topic guide: interviews with patients having PhysioDirect then face-to-face assessment
- Appendix 4 Protocol
- List of abbreviations
Notes
Article history
This issue of Health Technology Assessment contains a project originally commissioned by the MRC but managed by the Efficacy and Mechanism Evaluation Programme. The EME programme was created as part of the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) and the Medical Research Council (MRC) coordinated strategy for clinical trials. The EME programme is funded by the MRC and NIHR, with contributions from the CSO in Scotland and NISCHR in Wales and the HSC R&D, Public Health Agency in Northern Ireland. It is managed by the NIHR Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre (NETSCC) based at the University of Southampton
Declared competing interests of authors
none
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- Effectiveness of PhysioDirect telephone assessment and advice services for patients with musculoskeletal problems: pragmatic randomised controlled trial.[BMJ. 2013]Effectiveness of PhysioDirect telephone assessment and advice services for patients with musculoskeletal problems: pragmatic randomised controlled trial.Salisbury C, Montgomery AA, Hollinghurst S, Hopper C, Bishop A, Franchini A, Kaur S, Coast J, Hall J, Grove S, et al. BMJ. 2013 Jan 29; 346:f43. Epub 2013 Jan 29.
- A physiotherapy telephone assessment and advice service for patients with musculoskeletal problems can improve the process of care while maintaining clinical effectiveness.[J Physiother. 2013]A physiotherapy telephone assessment and advice service for patients with musculoskeletal problems can improve the process of care while maintaining clinical effectiveness.Iles R. J Physiother. 2013 Jun; 59(2):130.
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