Beliefs, perceptions and practices of chiropractors and patients about mitigation strategies for benign adverse events after spinal manipulation therapy
Abstract Background Approximately 50% of patients who receive spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) experience some kind of adverse event (AE), typically benign and transient in nature. Regardless of their severity, mitigating benign AEs is important to improve patient experience and quality of care. Th...
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doaj-32edcc1ef3af4322bea073d769c9a35e2020-11-25T03:05:32ZengBMCChiropractic & Manual Therapies2045-709X2020-09-012811910.1186/s12998-020-00336-3Beliefs, perceptions and practices of chiropractors and patients about mitigation strategies for benign adverse events after spinal manipulation therapyMartha Funabashi0Katherine A. Pohlman1Rachel Goldsworthy2Alex Lee3Anthony Tibbles4Silvano Mior5Greg Kawchuk6Department of Chiropractic, Université du Québec à Trois-RivièresParker UniversityCanadian Memorial Chiropractic CollegeCanadian Memorial Chiropractic CollegeCanadian Memorial Chiropractic CollegeCanadian Memorial Chiropractic CollegeUniversity of AlbertaAbstract Background Approximately 50% of patients who receive spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) experience some kind of adverse event (AE), typically benign and transient in nature. Regardless of their severity, mitigating benign AEs is important to improve patient experience and quality of care. The aim of this study was to identify beliefs, perceptions and practices of chiropractors and patients regarding benign AEs post-SMT and potential strategies to mitigate them. Methods Clinicians and patients from two chiropractic teaching clinics were invited to respond to an 11-question survey exploring their beliefs, perceptions and practices regarding benign AEs post-SMT and strategies to mitigate them. Responses were analyzed using descriptive statistics. Results A total of 39 clinicians (67% response rate) and 203 patients (82.9% response rate) completed the survey. Most clinicians (97%) believed benign AEs occur, and 82% reported their own patients have experienced one. For patients, 55% reported experiencing benign AEs post-SMT, with the most common symptoms being pain/soreness, headache and stiffness. While most clinicians (61.5%) reported trying a mitigation strategy with their patients, only 21.2% of patients perceived their clinicians had tried any mitigation strategy. Clinicians perceived that patient education is most likely to mitigate benign AEs, followed by soft tissue therapy and/or icing after SMT. Patients perceived stretching was most likely to mitigate benign AEs, followed by education and/or massage. Conclusions This is the first study comparing beliefs, perceptions and practices from clinicians and patients regarding benign AEs post-SMT and strategies to mitigate them. This study provides an important step towards identifying the best strategies to improve patient safety and improve quality of care.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12998-020-00336-3Spinal manipulationAdverse eventsMitigationSurveyPatient safetyQuality assurance |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Martha Funabashi Katherine A. Pohlman Rachel Goldsworthy Alex Lee Anthony Tibbles Silvano Mior Greg Kawchuk |
spellingShingle |
Martha Funabashi Katherine A. Pohlman Rachel Goldsworthy Alex Lee Anthony Tibbles Silvano Mior Greg Kawchuk Beliefs, perceptions and practices of chiropractors and patients about mitigation strategies for benign adverse events after spinal manipulation therapy Chiropractic & Manual Therapies Spinal manipulation Adverse events Mitigation Survey Patient safety Quality assurance |
author_facet |
Martha Funabashi Katherine A. Pohlman Rachel Goldsworthy Alex Lee Anthony Tibbles Silvano Mior Greg Kawchuk |
author_sort |
Martha Funabashi |
title |
Beliefs, perceptions and practices of chiropractors and patients about mitigation strategies for benign adverse events after spinal manipulation therapy |
title_short |
Beliefs, perceptions and practices of chiropractors and patients about mitigation strategies for benign adverse events after spinal manipulation therapy |
title_full |
Beliefs, perceptions and practices of chiropractors and patients about mitigation strategies for benign adverse events after spinal manipulation therapy |
title_fullStr |
Beliefs, perceptions and practices of chiropractors and patients about mitigation strategies for benign adverse events after spinal manipulation therapy |
title_full_unstemmed |
Beliefs, perceptions and practices of chiropractors and patients about mitigation strategies for benign adverse events after spinal manipulation therapy |
title_sort |
beliefs, perceptions and practices of chiropractors and patients about mitigation strategies for benign adverse events after spinal manipulation therapy |
publisher |
BMC |
series |
Chiropractic & Manual Therapies |
issn |
2045-709X |
publishDate |
2020-09-01 |
description |
Abstract Background Approximately 50% of patients who receive spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) experience some kind of adverse event (AE), typically benign and transient in nature. Regardless of their severity, mitigating benign AEs is important to improve patient experience and quality of care. The aim of this study was to identify beliefs, perceptions and practices of chiropractors and patients regarding benign AEs post-SMT and potential strategies to mitigate them. Methods Clinicians and patients from two chiropractic teaching clinics were invited to respond to an 11-question survey exploring their beliefs, perceptions and practices regarding benign AEs post-SMT and strategies to mitigate them. Responses were analyzed using descriptive statistics. Results A total of 39 clinicians (67% response rate) and 203 patients (82.9% response rate) completed the survey. Most clinicians (97%) believed benign AEs occur, and 82% reported their own patients have experienced one. For patients, 55% reported experiencing benign AEs post-SMT, with the most common symptoms being pain/soreness, headache and stiffness. While most clinicians (61.5%) reported trying a mitigation strategy with their patients, only 21.2% of patients perceived their clinicians had tried any mitigation strategy. Clinicians perceived that patient education is most likely to mitigate benign AEs, followed by soft tissue therapy and/or icing after SMT. Patients perceived stretching was most likely to mitigate benign AEs, followed by education and/or massage. Conclusions This is the first study comparing beliefs, perceptions and practices from clinicians and patients regarding benign AEs post-SMT and strategies to mitigate them. This study provides an important step towards identifying the best strategies to improve patient safety and improve quality of care. |
topic |
Spinal manipulation Adverse events Mitigation Survey Patient safety Quality assurance |
url |
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12998-020-00336-3 |
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