The epidemiology and medical management of low back pain during ambulatory medical care visits in the United States.

John C Licciardone
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Abstract

Background: Low back pain (LBP) is a common symptom.

Methods: Patient visits attributed to LBP in the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) during 2003-2004 served as the basis for epidemiological analyses (n = 1539). The subset of patient visits in which LBP was the primary reason for seeking care (primary LBP patient visits) served as the basis for medical management analyses (n = 1042). National population estimates were derived using statistical weighting techniques.

Results: There were 61.7 million (SE, 4.0 million) LBP patient visits and 42.4 million (SE, 3.1 million) primary LBP patient visits. Only 55% of LBP patient visits were provided by primary care physicians. Age, geographic region, chronicity of symptoms, injury, type of physician provider, and physician specialty were associated with LBP patient visits. Age, injury, primary care physician status, type of physician provider, and shared physician care were associated with chronicity of LBP care. Osteopathic physicians were more likely than allopathic physicians to provide medical care during LBP patient visits (odds ratio [OR], 2.61; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.75-3.92) and chronic LBP patient visits (OR, 4.39; 95% CI, 2.47-7.80). Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and narcotic analgesics were ordered during 14.2 million (SE, 1.2 million) and 10.5 million (SE, 1.1 million) primary LBP patient visits, respectively. Drugs (OR, 0.29; 95% CI, 0.13-0.62) and, specifically, NSAIDs (OR, 0.40; 95% CI, 0.25-0.64) were ordered less often during chronic LBP patient visits compared with acute LBP patient visits. Overall, osteopathic physicians were less likely than allopathic physicians to order NSAIDs for LBP (OR, 0.43; 95% CI, 0.24-0.76). Almost two million surgical procedures were ordered, scheduled, or performed during primary LBP patient visits.

Conclusion: The percentage of LBP visits provided by primary care physicians in the United States remains suboptimal. Medical management of LBP, particularly chronic LBP, appears to over-utilize surgery relative to more conservative measures such as patient counseling, non-narcotic analgesics, and other drug therapies. Osteopathic physicians are more likely to provide LBP care, and less likely to use NSAIDs during such visits, than their allopathic counterparts. In general, LBP medical management does not appear to be in accord with evidence-based guidelines.

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美国流动医疗就诊期间腰背痛的流行病学和医疗管理。
背景:腰背痛(LBP)是一种常见症状:腰背痛(LBP)是一种常见症状:在 2003-2004 年期间进行的全国非住院医疗护理调查(NAMCS)中,因腰背痛而就诊的病人是流行病学分析的基础(n = 1539)。以枸杞痛为主要就医原因的患者就诊子集(主要枸杞痛患者就诊)是医疗管理分析的基础(n = 1042)。使用统计加权技术得出全国人口估计数:枸杞多糖症患者就诊人次为 6170 万(SE,400 万),初级枸杞多糖症患者就诊人次为 4240 万(SE,310 万)。只有 55% 的枸杞多糖症患者就诊是由初级保健医生提供的。年龄、地理区域、症状的慢性程度、受伤情况、医生提供者的类型以及医生的专业与椎管内疼痛患者就诊次数有关。年龄、受伤情况、初级保健医生身份、医生提供者类型和共享医生护理与枸杞多糖症护理的长期性有关。骨科医生比全科医生更有可能在枸杞痛患者就诊期间提供医疗护理(几率比 [OR],2.61;95% 置信区间 [CI],1.75-3.92)和慢性枸杞痛患者就诊期间提供医疗护理(OR,4.39;95% 置信区间 [CI],2.47-7.80)。非甾体抗炎药(NSAIDs)和麻醉性镇痛药分别在 1420 万(SE,120 万)和 1050 万(SE,110 万)次初级枸杞痛患者就诊时被订购。与急性椎管内疼痛患者就诊相比,慢性椎管内疼痛患者就诊时订购药物(OR,0.29;95% CI,0.13-0.62),特别是非甾体抗炎药(OR,0.40;95% CI,0.25-0.64)的频率较低。总体而言,骨科医生比全科医生更少为腰痛患者开具非甾体抗炎药(OR,0.43;95% CI,0.24-0.76)。在初级枸杞痛患者就诊期间,近两百万例手术被下达了医嘱、安排或实施:结论:在美国,由初级保健医生提供的腰椎间盘突出症就诊比例仍未达到最佳水平。相对于病人咨询、非麻醉性镇痛药和其他药物疗法等保守措施,腰椎间盘突出症(尤其是慢性腰椎间盘突出症)的医疗管理似乎过度使用了外科手术。与对抗疗法医生相比,整骨疗法医生更倾向于提供椎管内疼痛治疗,并且在就诊过程中使用非甾体抗炎药的可能性较小。总的来说,腰椎间盘突出症的医疗管理似乎并不符合循证指南。
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