AI Article Synopsis

  • Group consultations (GCs) improve efficiency in healthcare by effectively managing common lower limb issues through physiotherapy, aiming to enhance patient satisfaction and clinical outcomes.
  • The project tested virtual group consultations (VGCs) and in-person GCs against four common conditions, measuring factors like patient experience and staff time.
  • Results showed significant reductions in physiotherapy time per patient and improved patient outcome scores, indicating that GCs can be a more efficient alternative to traditional one-on-one consultations, though comparisons to one-on-one methods remain unexamined.

Article Abstract

Background: Group consultations (GCs) in healthcare have been shown to improve clinical outcomes with greater efficiency. This project aimed to develop a more efficient musculoskeletal (MSK) physiotherapy-led GC approach for common lower limb problems. This was to help manage an anticipated increase in demand while maintaining high patient satisfaction and ensuring clinical effectiveness.

Methods: Three 'Plan-Do-Study-Act' (PDSA) cycles were undertaken to test out the new approach of virtual group consultations (VGCs) and face-to-face GCs with MSK patients. These two approaches were tested and refined on four common lower limb conditions: patellofemoral pain syndrome, Achilles tendinopathy, plantar fasciopathy and knee osteoarthritis. We measured the number of patients seen, staff time, patients' experience and patient outcome scores.

Results: Each patient used 45 min of physiotherapy time via the traditional one-to-one physiotherapy consultation approach, this was reduced to 22 min in the VGCs and 12 min for the face-to-face GCs. We found a significant increase in EQ-5D scores (PDSA 1: +0.19, p=0.004 and PDSA 2: +0.17, p=0.002) and the Visual Analogue Score for Pain (PDSA 1: -1.95, p=0.001 and PDSA 2: -2.6, p=0.007) from the first to the second virtual GC sessions.

Conclusion: GCs were shown to be an efficient way of providing physiotherapy to patients with lower limb conditions. Feedback from patients attending GCs has shown a good level of effectiveness and patient satisfaction. This alternative way to review and treat patients has yielded a reduction in physiotherapist contact time per patient, improving the efficiency of our MSK service. We did not compare these groups to the one-to-one face-to-face consultations, therefore whether they are better, is unknown.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11590858PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjoq-2024-002924DOI Listing

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