Associations Between Treatment Processes, Patient Characteristics, and Outcomes in Outpatient Physical Therapy Practice
Abstract
Deutscher D, Horn SD, Dickstein R, Hart DL, Smout RJ, Gutvirtz M, Ariel I. Associations between treatment processes, patient characteristics, and outcomes in outpatient physical therapy practice.
Objective
To identify how treatment processes are related to functional outcomes for patients seeking treatment for musculoskeletal impairments while controlling for demographic and health characteristics at intake.
Design
Prospective, observational cohort study. Treatment processes were not altered. Data were collected continuously from June 2005 to January 2008. Descriptive statistics were applied to compare patient characteristics, interventions, and outcomes between impairment categories. Ordinary least-squares multiple regressions were used to examine associations between patient characteristics at intake, treatment processes, and functional outcomes.
Setting
Fifty-four community-based outpatient physical therapy clinics of Maccabi Healthcare Services, a public health plan in Israel.
Participants
A consecutive sample of 22,019 adult patients (mean age 51.2y, standard deviation=15.7, range 18–96, 58% women) seeking treatment due to lumbar spine, knee, cervical spine, or shoulder impairments with functional measurements at intake and discharge.
Interventions
Not applicable.
Main Outcome Measure
Functional status at discharge.
Results
Explanatory power ranged from 30% to 39%. Better outcomes were associated with patient compliance with self-exercise and therapy attendance, application of therapeutic exercise and manual therapy, and completion of 3 or more functional surveys during the episode of care. Worse outcomes were associated with women, electrotherapy for pain management, and therapeutic ultrasound for shoulder impairments. Mixed results were found for group exercise programs.
Conclusions
The study of associations between treatment processes, patient characteristics, and outcomes helps to describe practice and can be used to suggest ways to improve outcomes in outpatient physical therapy practice.
aPhysical Therapy Services, Maccabi Health Care Services—HMO, Tel-Aviv, Israel
bNorthern District Physical Therapy Services, Maccabi Health Care Services—HMO, Haifa, Israel
cDepartment of Physical Therapy, Faculty of Social Welfare and Health Sciences, University of Haifa, Mount Carmel, Haifa, Israel
dInstitute for Clinical Outcomes Research, Salt Lake City, UT
eConsulting and Research, Focus On Therapeutic Outcomes Inc, White Stone, VA
Correspondence to Daniel Deutscher, MSc, PT, 27 Hamered St, Tel-Aviv 68125, Israel
Supported by Maccabi Healthcare Services—HMO, Israel; and by the Maccabi Institute for Health Services Research, Israel.
A commercial party having a direct financial interest in the results of the research supporting this article has conferred or will confer a financial benefit on the author or one or more of the authors. Hart is an employee of, and investor in, Focus On Therapeutic Outcomes Inc, a database management company, owner of the outcomes collection software used to collect function outcome for the study.