Quality of rheumatology care for patients with fibromyalgia and chronic pain syndromes

Background One-third of primary care providers (PCPs) refer patients with fibromyalgia or chronic pain (FM/CP) to specialist care, typically rheumatology. Yet, comprehensive data on the quality of rheumatology care for patients with FM/CP are currently lacking.Methods Records of patients referred fo...

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Main Authors: Hilary YM Pang, Chandra Farrer, Natasha K Gakhal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2021-03-01
Series:BMJ Open Quality
Online Access:https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/10/1/e001061.full
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spelling doaj-20750308da0e4e6d8cb181f482997cfd2021-04-22T10:01:05ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open Quality2399-66412021-03-0110110.1136/bmjoq-2020-001061Quality of rheumatology care for patients with fibromyalgia and chronic pain syndromesHilary YM Pang0Chandra Farrer1Natasha K Gakhal2Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, CanadaDepartment of Rheumatology, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, CanadaTemerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, CanadaBackground One-third of primary care providers (PCPs) refer patients with fibromyalgia or chronic pain (FM/CP) to specialist care, typically rheumatology. Yet, comprehensive data on the quality of rheumatology care for patients with FM/CP are currently lacking.Methods Records of patients referred for rheumatology consultation for FM/CP and seen at a single academic centre between 2017 and 2018 were extracted by retrospective chart review. Variables were diagnostic accuracy (at referral vs consultation), resource utilisation (investigations, medications, medical and allied health referral), direct costs (physician billing, staff salary, investigation fees) and access (consult wait time). Patient experience and referring PCP experience surveys were administered.Results 79 charts were identified. Following consultation, 81% of patients (n=64) maintained the same diagnosis of FM/CP, 19% (n=15) were diagnosed with regional pain and 0% of patients (n=0) were diagnosed with an inflammatory arthritis or connective tissue disease. Investigations were ordered for 37% of patients (n=29), medication prescribed for 10% (n=8) and an allied health referral provided for 54% (n=43). Direct costs totalled $19 745 (average $250/consult; range $157–$968/consult). Consultation wait time averaged 184 days (range 62–228 days). Out of the seven (64%) responses to the patient experience survey, 86% of patients (n=6) were satisfied with provider communication but the consultation ‘definitely’ met the expectations of only 57% (n=4). The PCP survey returned an insufficient response rate.Conclusions This study found that no patient referred to rheumatology care for FM/CP was diagnosed with an inflammatory arthritis or connective tissue disease. Furthermore, patients with FM/CP experience lengthy wait times for rheumatology care which delay their management of chronic pain. Interdisciplinary and collaborative healthcare models can potentially provide higher quality care for patients with FM/CP.https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/10/1/e001061.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hilary YM Pang
Chandra Farrer
Natasha K Gakhal
spellingShingle Hilary YM Pang
Chandra Farrer
Natasha K Gakhal
Quality of rheumatology care for patients with fibromyalgia and chronic pain syndromes
BMJ Open Quality
author_facet Hilary YM Pang
Chandra Farrer
Natasha K Gakhal
author_sort Hilary YM Pang
title Quality of rheumatology care for patients with fibromyalgia and chronic pain syndromes
title_short Quality of rheumatology care for patients with fibromyalgia and chronic pain syndromes
title_full Quality of rheumatology care for patients with fibromyalgia and chronic pain syndromes
title_fullStr Quality of rheumatology care for patients with fibromyalgia and chronic pain syndromes
title_full_unstemmed Quality of rheumatology care for patients with fibromyalgia and chronic pain syndromes
title_sort quality of rheumatology care for patients with fibromyalgia and chronic pain syndromes
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series BMJ Open Quality
issn 2399-6641
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Background One-third of primary care providers (PCPs) refer patients with fibromyalgia or chronic pain (FM/CP) to specialist care, typically rheumatology. Yet, comprehensive data on the quality of rheumatology care for patients with FM/CP are currently lacking.Methods Records of patients referred for rheumatology consultation for FM/CP and seen at a single academic centre between 2017 and 2018 were extracted by retrospective chart review. Variables were diagnostic accuracy (at referral vs consultation), resource utilisation (investigations, medications, medical and allied health referral), direct costs (physician billing, staff salary, investigation fees) and access (consult wait time). Patient experience and referring PCP experience surveys were administered.Results 79 charts were identified. Following consultation, 81% of patients (n=64) maintained the same diagnosis of FM/CP, 19% (n=15) were diagnosed with regional pain and 0% of patients (n=0) were diagnosed with an inflammatory arthritis or connective tissue disease. Investigations were ordered for 37% of patients (n=29), medication prescribed for 10% (n=8) and an allied health referral provided for 54% (n=43). Direct costs totalled $19 745 (average $250/consult; range $157–$968/consult). Consultation wait time averaged 184 days (range 62–228 days). Out of the seven (64%) responses to the patient experience survey, 86% of patients (n=6) were satisfied with provider communication but the consultation ‘definitely’ met the expectations of only 57% (n=4). The PCP survey returned an insufficient response rate.Conclusions This study found that no patient referred to rheumatology care for FM/CP was diagnosed with an inflammatory arthritis or connective tissue disease. Furthermore, patients with FM/CP experience lengthy wait times for rheumatology care which delay their management of chronic pain. Interdisciplinary and collaborative healthcare models can potentially provide higher quality care for patients with FM/CP.
url https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/10/1/e001061.full
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