Abstract
Objectives
To evaluate the effect of introducing a physiotherapist-led paediatric Soft Tissue Injury Clinic model as an alternative to a medically led Fracture Clinic model for conservative hospital management of soft-tissue injuries on: patient wait times; healthcare resource use; and cost-effectiveness.
Design
Interrupted time-series analysis (including consecutive eligible-cases).
Setting
Children’s hospital, Australia.
Participants
The study included 245 cases (117 Soft Tissue Injury Clinic model sample, 128 Fracture Clinic model sample) of patients (<18 years) who presented to a specialist children’s hospital emergency department and diagnosed with a soft tissue injury requiring non-surgical outpatient management.
Interventions
Patients were referred from the emergency department to either an orthopaedic-led fracture clinic (Fracture Clinic model) or physiotherapist-led clinic (Soft Tissue Injury Clinic model) for follow-up and further management as clinically indicated.
Main outcome measures
Time from emergency department discharge to commencement of definitive outpatient management (primary); healthcare resource use and costs from hospital funder perspective (secondary) and cost-per-day less waiting (cost-effectiveness).
Results
The Soft Tissue Injury Clinic was associated with (mean per-person difference (95%CI), P-value) fewer wait days (−8 (−11, −5) days, P < 0.001), fewer orthopaedic costs P < 0.001, >99% probability of fewer days waiting, 81% probability of less total cost and 81% probability of dominance (cheaper and fewer days to access definitive care). There were no adverse events in either model.
Conclusions
The physiotherapist-led Soft Tissue Injury Clinic represented a safe and efficient alternative referral pathway for patients presenting to the emergency department with soft tissue injuries requiring conservative management.