Postpartum Physical Therapy Utilization Among Low-Income Patients in San Diego.

IF 0.8 Q4 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Jessica L Swartz, Natalie L Vawter, Job G Godino, Jason Van Dyke, Naomi V Rodas, Alma I Behar, Lori J Tuttle
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Importance: Postpartum patients face significant musculoskeletal sequelae of childbirth, which may be compounded by medical characteristics and social determinants of health. These symptoms are treatable with pelvic floor physical therapy, yet postpartum physical therapy referral and adherence rates remain low. The reasons for this are understudied. Furthermore, most current research centers on non-Hispanic, middle- to upper-class White patients, limiting applicability to other populations.

Objectives: The objectives of this study were to evaluate differences in physical therapy referral and adherence rates among medically underserved female patients and determine whether certain variables predicted or moderated adherence to outpatient postpartum physical therapy.

Study design: Data from a retrospective cohort study of electronic health records were analyzed using 2-way t tests, analysis of variance, and logistic regression techniques.

Results: Hispanic patients were referred to physical therapy at a disproportionately low rate compared to other racial/ethnic groups (8.8% vs 16.7% and 14.7%, P < 0.0001); older age and higher pain were present in both referred versus nonreferred ( P < 0.0001, both) and adherent versus nonadherent ( P < 0.05 and P < 0.01, respectively) patients; patients who received referrals were significantly more depressed ( P < 0.0001), more educated ( P < 0.0001), had higher rates of grade 3-4 perineal laceration ( P < 0.01), and had higher parity ( P < 0.0001) and gravidity ( P < 0.0001) compared to their nonreferred counterparts; pain, education, race, and age were important predictors of physical therapy adherence (predictor model P = 0.0001); and Asian race moderated the relationship between physical therapy referral and adherence ( P = 0.017).

Conclusions: In a postpartum population, physical therapy referrals were low and ethnic disparities were present. Adherence to physical therapy was also affected by patient demographics and medical history. Interventions to increase postpartum physical therapy referral and adherence should consider the patient's social determinants of health and medical needs.

圣地亚哥低收入患者产后物理治疗的应用
重要性:产后患者面临明显的分娩肌肉骨骼后遗症,这可能因医学特征和健康的社会决定因素而复杂化。这些症状是可以治疗盆底物理治疗,但产后物理治疗转诊率和依从率仍然很低。其原因尚未得到充分研究。此外,目前大多数研究集中在非西班牙裔、中上层白人患者身上,限制了对其他人群的适用性。目的:本研究的目的是评估医疗服务不足的女性患者在物理治疗转诊和依从率方面的差异,并确定某些变量是否预测或调节门诊产后物理治疗的依从性。研究设计:采用双路t检验、方差分析和逻辑回归技术对电子健康记录的回顾性队列研究数据进行分析。结果:与其他种族/族裔相比,西班牙裔患者接受物理治疗的比例低得不成比例(8.8% vs 16.7%和14.7%,P < 0.0001);在转诊患者与非转诊患者(均P < 0.0001)和依从性患者与非依从性患者(分别P < 0.05和P < 0.01)中均存在年龄较大和较高的疼痛;转诊患者抑郁程度(P < 0.0001)、受教育程度(P < 0.0001)、会阴3-4级裂伤发生率(P < 0.01)、胎次(P < 0.0001)和妊娠率(P < 0.0001)明显高于未转诊患者;疼痛、教育程度、种族和年龄是物理治疗依从性的重要预测因素(预测模型P = 0.0001);亚洲种族调节物理治疗转诊与依从性的关系(P = 0.017)。结论:在产后人群中,物理治疗转诊率低且存在种族差异。对物理治疗的坚持也受到患者人口统计学和病史的影响。增加产后物理治疗转诊和依从性的干预措施应考虑患者健康和医疗需求的社会决定因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
2.80
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