Participation in Low Back Pain Management: It Is Time for the To-Be Scenarios in Digital Public Health
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. The Dress-KINESIS Tool
- The WO section (lasting from 45 min to one hour) includes a warm-up phase and some daily exercises aimed at strengthening the core muscles and the deep abdominal muscles, promoting respiratory control and increasing the range of motion of the spine and joints as well as overall body flexibility. These movements focus on improving balance, developing the muscular rate of force and reducing the neuromuscular fatigability.
- The AE section (lasting about 30 min) includes some specific aerobic activities (running, walking and climbing steps) and stretching movements. The AE section aims at preventing/limiting bone loss and metabolic syndrome. The AE sections are tailored based on some abilities of the tool users, identified through the answers provided to specific items of the LEAFS scale.
- Aim (improving balance, strengthening the core muscles, hip mobilization, spine flexibility, promoting respiratory control, etc.);
- Starting position (lying prone or supine, standing, kneeling, etc.);
- Type of movement;
- Target muscles;
- Effort intensity, based on the work metabolic rate of each type of exercise (MET, metabolic equivalent) [29] and the number of repetitions planned for each user.
2.2. The Scenarios Approach
- The Ministry of Health surveyed 1141 rehabilitation institutes in Italy. During 2019, each institute counted an average of 9.91 outpatient accesses per day (95% CI: 2.17–17.65%) in the area of motor rehabilitation (expressed needs) [33].
- About 90% of all patients show non-specific LBP [34]. To manage uncomplicated acute LBP, international guidelines recommend the provision of advice, education, reassurance and simple analgesics, but 33% of patients who follow first-line care experience a recurrence in the next 12 months, and 20% to 30% develop chronic pain [35].
- Early engagement of patients reduces healthcare costs through the avoidance of unnecessary investigations and treatments [36]. Childs et al. estimated that in the 2-year follow-up period after a new episode of LBP, patients involved in early physical therapy protocols (within 0–14 days following pain onset) save EUR 1106 of healthcare costs (prescription of drugs and hospital costs) compared to patients undergoing delayed physical therapy [37].
- Between 58% and 75% of LBP patients (medium and high risk of poor prognosis) require further physiotherapy treatments after having performed the first activity protocol [40].
- LBP therapy strategies mainly depend on pain classification in terms of intensity and duration [41]. Many clinical trials have been conducted to evaluate the effects of particular physical interventions, but heterogeneity among LBP patients included in the same intervention tends to dilute the treatment results [42].
- Subgroup-matched treatment approaches have been proposed to improve evidence-based guidelines for supporting clinical decision-making. In the field of conservative management of LBP, the Treatment-Based Classification (TBC) system was first described by Delitto and colleagues in 1995 and has been further updated based on emerging evidence [27].
2.3. The As-Is Scenario
- Entities, the dynamic objects in the simulation, representing non-specific LBP patients;
- Resources including (a) four physiotherapists with their work cost (EUR 12.00/h) and (b) drug prescription and inpatient costs during the 24 months after LBP onset (EUR 1106.00). Healthcare costs regard patients who did not express their care needs only.
- Total Needs create module (Figure 5 and Figure 6a), set by considering: (a) total demand of 5.8 patients/day per rehabilitation institute, (b) time between arrivals of patients with expressed and non-expressed needs, following a “random(expo)” distribution with an average interarrival time of 0.98 h (λ) and an arrival rate of 1.02 patients/hour (1/λ). These parameters are estimated from an LBP point prevalence of 7.5% [31].
- Attribute module: TNOW. This attribute is set to the system time (TNOW) when a new patient arrives. It records the simulation clock time as the model progresses.
- PhysioTime hold and signal module (Figure 5): used for restricting the physiotherapists’ working days to Monday-to-Friday intervals.
- ProtSupervTime seize–delay–release module (Figure 5 and Figure 6b): used for modeling the time spent by a physiotherapist on the supervision of each patient during protocol execution. Under the hypothesis that a physiotherapist spends three working hours per week on each patient and follows a group of three patients at a time, the physiotherapy daily effort is set to 2.5% of his total time. Additionally, the ProtSupervTime follows a triangular distribution of 20, 30, 40 days.
- New Protocol seize–delay–release module (Figure 5 and Figure 6b): used for modeling the time spent by a physiotherapist on the supervision of each patient with a poor/medium prognosis during the adjunctive protocol execution. This module has the same parameters of the ProtSupervTime seize–delay–release module.
- (1)
- (2)
2.4. The To-Be Scenarios
2.5. Systems Replication Parameters
- NUMBER OF REPLICATIONS (of each model): 100;
- STARTING DATE AND TIME of replication: Friday 2021/01/01 9:00;
- LENGTH OF EACH REPLICATION: 30 days;
- HOURS PER DAY of replication: 8.
2.6. Output Measures and Statistical Analysis
3. Results
4. Discussion
- One-size-fits-all examination and long waiting times could lead patients to feel that they are not being treated as individuals, thus promoting distrust in healthcare services and hesitation to take health assessments [50].
- Consumers’ spending attitudes are influenced by the cost level of preventive medical services, in particular the out-of-pocket cost, as well as the expected health profit from a medical intervention. This makes health information/education a central point in consumers’ decision-making processes [50].
- In the real world, up to 70% of patients do not engage in prescribed home exercise, and the lack of time and/or motivation are the main reasons pointed out by people to justify this [51]. This reduces both the adherence to the maintenance activity among patients who have performed a first cycle of supervised exercise and the propensity to perform any structured physical activity among those who do not seek care, in particular when the perceived intensity of pain is low.
- The most effective treatments for LBP consist of tailored designed exercise programs which are delivered in a supervised format (e.g., home exercise with regular therapist follow-up) [52].
Strength and Limitations:
5. Conclusions
6. Patents
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Physiotherapists | Healthcare Costs Next 2 Years | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Scenario | % +D-K Support | Pat. IN 30 Days (95% CI Half Width) | Av. WIP (95% CI Half Width) | %Δ WIP (p) | Av. Number physio. Use over Time (95% CI Half Width) | Av. Number Patients Waiting for a physio. (95% CI half width) | Average Waiting Days for a Physio. (95% CI Half Width) | Av. Cost (€) (95% CI Half Width) | %Δ Cost (p) | Av. Costs (€) (95% CI Half Width) | %Δ Costs (p) |
AS IS | E:0; NE:0 | 245.52 (±3.09) | 45.43 (±0.86) | - | 0.85 (±0.02) | 1.97 (±0.05) | 0.84 (±0.02) | 439.10 (±13.47) | - | 183,662.36 (±2914.46) | - |
TO BE Expr | E:50 | 245.59 (±3.08) | 45.43 (±0.87) | 0.0% (>0.05) | 0.85 (±0.02) | 1.97 (±0.05) | 0.84 (±0.02) | 438.65 (±13.39) | −0.10% (>0.05) | 183,695.54 (±2914.33) | 0.02% (>0.05) |
E:60 | 245.63 (±3.05) | 45.43 (±0.87) | 0.0% (>0.05) | 0.85 (±0.02) | 1.97 (±0.05) | 0.84 (±0.02) | 438.52 (±13.38) | −0.18% (>0.05) | 183,717.66 (±2910.66) | 0.04% (>0.05) | |
E:70 | 245.66 (±3.05) | 45.43 (±0.87) | 0.0% (>0.05) | 0.85 (±0.02) | 1.97 (±0.05) | 0.84 (±0.02) | 438.31 (±13.38) | −0.18% (>0.05) | 183,739.78 (±2910.66) | 0.04% (>0.05) | |
E:80 | 245.63 (±3.02) | 45.43 (±0.86) | 0.0% (>0.05) | 0.85 (±0.02) | 1.97 (±0.05) | 0.84 (±0.02) | 438.19 (±13.35) | −0.21% (>0.05) | 183,784.02 (±2888.98) | 0.07% (>0.05) | |
E:100 | 245.80 (±3.04) | 45.43 (±0.86) | 0.0% (>0.05) | 0.85 (±0.02) | 1.97 (±0.05) | 0.84 (±0.02) | 437.96 (±13.36) | −0.26% (>0.05) | 183,994.16 (±2933.87) | 0.18% (>0.05) | |
TO BE Not-Expr | NE:10 | 246.50 (±3.44) | 53.27 (±1.02) | 17.26% (<0.05) | 0.85 (±0.02) | 2.03 (±0.06) | 0.87 (±0.02) | 439.36 (±13.73) | −0.16% (>0.05) | 167,028.12 (±3068.02) | −9.04% (<0.05) |
NE:15 | 247.32 (±3.26) | 57.45 (±1.10) | 26.46% (<0.05) | 0.86 (±0.02) | 2.06 (±0.06) | 0.87 (±0.02) | 447.36 (±13.71) | 1.88% (>0.05) | 157,394.86 (±2700.72) | −14.30% (<0.05) | |
NE:20 | 247.11 (±3.64) | 60.89 (±1.16) | 34.03% (<0.05) | 0.85 (±0.02) | 2.06 (±0.06) | 0.87 (±0.02) | 441.66 (±13.90) | 0.58% (>0.05) | 149,210.46 (±2666.38) | −18.76% (<0.05) | |
TO BE Mixed | E:80; NE:10 | 246.50 (±3.48) | 53.27 (±1.02) | 17.26% (<0.05) | 0.85 (±0.02) | 2.03 (±0.06) | 0.87 (±0.02) | 438.41 (±14.52) | −0.16% (>0.05) | 167,050.24 (±3062.47) | −9.04% (<0.05) |
E:80; NE:15 | 247.23 (±3.24) | 57.44 (±1.10) | 26.44% (<0.05) | 0.86 (±0.02) | 2.05 (±0.06) | 0.87 (±0.02) | 445.85 (±13.53) | 1.54% (>0.05) | 157,350.62 (±2714.94) | −14.33% (<0.05) | |
E:80; NE:20 | 247.02 (±3.59) | 60.89 (±1.16) | 34.03% (<0.05) | 0.85 (±0.02) | 2.06 (±0.06) | 0.87 (±0.02) | 440.48 (±13.69) | 0.31% (>0.05) | 149,011.38 (±2617.97) | −18.87% (<0.05) |
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Franchini, M.; Salvatori, M.; Denoth, F.; Molinaro, S.; Pieroni, S. Participation in Low Back Pain Management: It Is Time for the To-Be Scenarios in Digital Public Health. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 7805. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137805
Franchini M, Salvatori M, Denoth F, Molinaro S, Pieroni S. Participation in Low Back Pain Management: It Is Time for the To-Be Scenarios in Digital Public Health. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(13):7805. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137805
Chicago/Turabian StyleFranchini, Michela, Massimiliano Salvatori, Francesca Denoth, Sabrina Molinaro, and Stefania Pieroni. 2022. "Participation in Low Back Pain Management: It Is Time for the To-Be Scenarios in Digital Public Health" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 13: 7805. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137805
APA StyleFranchini, M., Salvatori, M., Denoth, F., Molinaro, S., & Pieroni, S. (2022). Participation in Low Back Pain Management: It Is Time for the To-Be Scenarios in Digital Public Health. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(13), 7805. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137805