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Back Pain

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perform diagnostic triage and screen for 'red flags' to exclude ... significant diagnostic error. without imaging tests can. be allayed; if clinicians stay ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Back Pain


1
Back Pain Return-to-WorkPerfect Together or
Not?By Mark Werneke MS, PT, Dip.
MDTCentraState Medical Center Rehabilitation
Department
2
PurposeEvidence-Based Guidelines
  • Managing workers with low back pain
  • Implementing best practice case management
    programs to
  • enhance quality of treatment
  • contain health care costs

3
Report CardEpidemic of Low Back Disability
4
Disability Rates 1950 - 1970
  • Stable LBP prevalence rates
  • Disproportional increase

5
Back Claims As Of Total Claims (USA)
Bureau of Labor Statistics 12 increase days
from work between 2002 - 2003
6
International Disability Rates
  • Spine 1995 8.1 million sick days/year in Great
    Britain
  • Spine 1998 Sweden 40 fold increase disability
    rates past 2 decades

7
Disability Cost Breakdown
  • 33 costs direct medical intervention
  • 67 costs indirect indemnity costs such as lost
    wages

Webster Spine 1994
75 billion/year USD
8
History of Low Back Pain
9
Disproportional Disability and Costs Due to Back
Pain
  • Multifactorial Problems
  • medical
  • legal
  • financial
  • industrial

10
Evidence-Based Guidelines
  • First International Occupational Health
    Guidelines 2001
  • www.facoccmed.au.uk
  • European Back Guidelines
  • 2004
  • www.backpaineurope.org

11
International Occupational Health Guidelines
  • Back pain, if poorly managed, will have
    devastating effect on return to work
  • Rehabilitation plan first week after start of
    LBP episode to prevent chronic problem

12
International Occupational Health Guidelines
  • Pre-placement assessment
  • Prevention
  • Examination for worker with back pain
  • Management of worker with acute LBP
  • Management of worker unable to RTW at normal job
    duties after 4-12 weeks

13
Evidence Ratings
The weight of evidence is rated Strong
evidence - multiple high quality studies
Moderate evidence -single acceptable study,
or smaller low quality studies limited or
inconsistent scientific evidence, lack of
acceptable study -- no scientific evidence
14
Pre-Placement Screening
  • Strong evidence
  • single most consistent predictor of future
    LBP/workloss is employees previous low back pain
    history
  • prior lumbar surgery
  • prior sickness absenteeism due to back pain
  • back-function testing machines have no predictive
    value
  • X-rays MRI have no predictive value

15
Pre-Placement Screening
  • Moderate evidence
  • physical examination findings height, weight,
    lumbar ROM, and cardiovascular fitness have
    little to no predictive value
  • FCE (functional capacity evaluation) matching
    physical ability to job demands are of limited
    value for reducing future LBP

16
Prevention at the Worksite
  • Strong evidence
  • Physical exercise is recommended
  • lumbar belts or supports do not reduce
    work-related LBP and workloss
  • shoe inserts/orthoses are not recommended
  • traditional Back schools based on anatomy and
    injury models are not beneficial

17
Prevention at the Worksite
  • Moderate evidence
  • ergonomic intervention requires employer
    organisational dimension involving worker
  • Recent research
  • new educational back programs addressing pain
    beliefs and fear avoidance behaviors reduce
    workloss due to LBP
  • employer-worker initiatives emphasizing a safety
    culture at work reduces workloss

18
Examination Employee with Low Back Pain
  • Strong evidence
  • MRI and X-ray finding do not correlate with work
    capacity or clinical symptoms
  • Screen for yellow flags or psychosocial factors
    to identify workers at high risk for extended
    workloss/disability

19
Examination Employee with Low Back Pain
  • Yellow Flags
  • belief that back pain is harmful and results from
    serious spinal pathology
  • elevated fear of physical activity
  • expects passive treatment and expresses little
    confidence in ability to RTW

Werneke Hart Spine 2001 and JRM 2005
20
Examination Employee with Low Back Pain
  • limited evidence yet strong consensus among
    international experts
  • perform diagnostic triage and screen for red
    flags to exclude serious spinal pathology and
    true nerve root problems

21
Examination Employee with Low Back Pain
  • Diagnostic Triage
  • Serious Spinal Pathology
  • Nerve Root Pain
  • Nonspecific Back Pain

22
Serious Spinal Pathology Red Flags
  • Violent trauma, fracture
  • age lt20 gt50 years
  • PMH carcinoma, steroids, drug abuse
  • unwell, weight loss, fever
  • widespread neurology (S4 syndrome)
  • Thoracic pain, structural deformity

Prevalence 1-2
23
physician fears of making a significant
diagnostic error without imaging tests can be
allayed if clinicians stay alert for red flags
Borkan Spine 2002 McGuirk Spine
2001
24
Nerve Root Pain
  • Unilateral leg pain gt back pain
  • Radiates to foot or toes
  • Numbness/paraesthesia in same distribution
  • Localized neurological signs
  • Positive SLR (lt45) reproduces pain or
    paraesthesia below knee

Prevalence 5
25
disc prolapse is a diagnosis that is overused,
misused, and abused by patients and physicians
and should be restricted for disc pathology
with clear signs of nerve involvement
Waddell Back Pain Revolution
2001
26
Nonspecific Low Back Pain
  • Mechanical back pain with or without leg symptoms

Prevalence 85 - 93
27
Examination Employee with Low Back Pain
  • Moderate evidence
  • traditional physical findings height, weight,
    lumbar ROM are of limited value
  • New Research Classification
  • treatment-based classification systems
  • Fritz Spine 2003 Long Spine 2004
  • clinical prediction rules
  • Childs Ann Int Med 2004 Hicks Arch Phys Med
    Rehabil
  • centralization
  • (Werneke and Hart Spine 1999- 2003, Phys Ther
    04, JRM 05)

28
Management for Worker with Recent Low Back Pain
  • Strong evidence
  • most workers are able to RTW within days to 1-2
    weeks despite residual and recurrent symptoms, do
    not wait until pain free
  • advise return to usual activities despite pain
    and avoid advise to rest and let pain be your
    guide

29
Management for Worker with Recent Low Back Pain
  • Moderate evidence
  • early intervention designed to overcome fear
    avoidance beliefs, encourage self- care for back,
    and support early RTW,
  • communication cooperation between occupational
    health team, supervisors, employers, and
    employees to achieve successful treatment outcome

30
Management for Worker with Back Pain after 4-12
Weeks
  • Strong evidence
  • Longer off work greater the chances of ever
    returning to work
  • Off work 4-12 wks 10-40 off work at 1 year
  • Off work 1 year 5 likelihood to ever RTW
  • Off work 1 year - subsequent clinical
    interventions are ineffective

31
Management for Worker with Back Pain after 4-12
Weeks
  • Moderate evidence
  • Combination of clinical management,
    rehabilitation program, and organizational
    intervention produces faster RTW, less sickness
    absence, and less chronic disability,
  • Management designed to overcome fear avoidance
    beliefs and promote self-care,
  • Temporary light duty ergonomic workplace
    adaptations facilitates RTW

32
Occupational Low Back PainModerate- Strong
Evidence
  • Private Insurance W/C data
  • Decreasing length of disability days and costs
  • Improved management strategies following
    evidence-based guidelines
  • Employers increased involvement in managing back
    problems via early injury reporting policies and
    transitional duty programs
  • Primary Challenge
  • integrate and apply guidelines at the local
    medical and industrial communities
  • dialogue relationship building between all
    stakeholders
  • guidelines structure the dialogue and provide the
    criteria to support interventions

33
Case Management
  • Payor strategies
  • capitation
  • utilization reviews
  • pre-authorization procedures
  • Provider strategy
  • Pay for Performance program (P4P)

34
Landmark Report
  • Institute of Medicine
  • CMS private payors
  • MedPac 2005

Crossing the Quality Chasm A New Health System
for the 21st Century
35
Rehabilitation Services
  • Offers a unique opportunity for paying on the
    basis of outcomes
  • Reliable, valid, and responsive functional status
    measures exist to facilitate meaningful P4P
    processes

36
High Quality Rehabilitation Providers
  • Value of Service
  • treatment efficiency
  • treatment effectiveness
  • patient satisfaction

In God we trust, everyone else bring data
37
CentraStates Rehabilitation Services
  • FOTO
  • national medical rehabilitation data management
    company
  • 1,500 customers participating nationwide e.g.
    hospital or private outpatient clinics
  • by providing external risk-adjusted database,
    can measure value against other providers
  • Strongly positioned to prove the value of our
    rehabilitation services

38
CentraStates RehabilitationTreatment Efficiency
  • Efficiency
  • Number of treatment visits/episode 5 (38 lt
    national average)
  • Duration of treatment episode 23 days (30 lt
    national average)

39
Treatment Effectiveness
  • Effectiveness is determined by achieving
    high quality functional outcomes while
    maintaining high patient satisfaction
  • FOTO effectiveness outcome measure
  • US Dept of Health Human Services
  • National Quality Measures Clearinghouse
  • Institute of Medicine

40
CentraStates RehabilitationTreatment
Effectiveness
  • Effectiveness
  • functional improvement /episode 50 gtnational
    average
  • Patient satisfaction 97

41
High-Quality Providers Rehabilitation Services
  • Active in case management
  • Prove the quality of services to both payors and
    employers by demonstrating efficient effective
    data

42
Report CardEpidemic of Low Back Disability
43
21st Century Challenge
44
Evidence-Based Practice
  • Back pain and return to work are perfect together

45
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