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First Article
Managed care
NEW STUDY SHOWS CHIROPRACTIC COST EFFECTIVE IN MANAGED CARE
Cost for back and neck care "substantially lower for chiropractic patients"
While the cost effectiveness of chiropractic care is well demonstrated
and established in the minds of many, what about chiropractic care
delivered in a managed care system? This question has undoubtedly been
asked in the board rooms of managed care corporations across the United
States.
The answer to that question came in the March 1996 issue of the
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MANAGED CARE(AJMC). The AJMC is a new publication that
refers to itself as "the forum for peer-reviewed literature on managed
healthcare." A paper by Mosley et al. in that issue, "Cost-Effectiveness
of Chiropractic Care in a Managed Care Setting," 1 came to some
interesting conclusions, several of which were surprising. The study
looked at patients of an "independent physician model HMO" operating in
Louisiana. The abstract tells the story:
"The authors retrospectively evaluated that cost of health care for
back or neck pain (ICD-9 codes 720 through 724) for members of a health
maintenance organization who sought chiropractic care (n=121) or other
treatment methods (n=1,838). In addition, differences between the groups
in surgical rates, the use of diagnostic imaging (computed tomography and
magnetic resonance imaging), and patient satisfaction were compared. The
analysis was conducted on claims paid between October 1, 1994 and October
1, 1995.
The cost of health care for back and neck pain was substantially lower
for chiropractic patients than for non-chiropractic patients ($539 vs
$774). Utilization of prescription drugs and diagnostic imaging were
significantly greater in the nonchiropractic group, whereas surgical rates
and patient satisfaction were nearly identical. The authors concluded:
"Properly managed chiropractic care can yield outcomes in terms of surgical
requirements and patient satisfaction , that are equal to those of non-
chiropractic care at a substantially lower cost per patient."
One interesting finding of the study was that chiropractors used
diagnostic imaging much less frequently than the non-chiropractic group
(4.9% of the time, versus 16.5%). And it came as no surprise that the non-
chiropractic patients received twice as many prescriptions.
But the appearance of similar satisfaction scores and surgical rates
in the Mosley et al. study are surprising findings and raise a number of
questions. For example, there's a study that has demonstrated three times
the patient satisfaction with chiropractic care than conventional medical
care for low back pain.2 It is quite possible that the size of the
population in the Mosley et al. study was too small to reveal potential
differences.
Co-investigator, Ilana G. Cohen, AIC, DC, was the only chiropractor to
work on this study. In an exclusive interview she commented:
"The paper clearly demonstrates that chiropractic services, managed by
a chiropractor, was integrated within the mainstream of Community Health
Network of Louisiana. It has proven to be satisfactory to patients and
providers, as well as cost effective for care of low back and neck
problems."
When asked what the most important aspect of the paper stet, Dr Cohen
told us that it was the offering of self-referral chiropractic services
that were implemented and "strongly recommended as a treatment of choice by
Roy M. Arnold, MD, medical director of Community Health Network of
Louisiana." Dr. Cohen said that the possibility of the similar surgery and
patient satisfaction rates changing when tested against a larger population
"remains to be determined."
Dr. Cohen will be continuing her work by comparing the outcomes of
this research with the continued increase of the subscriber populations.
She also plans to study other "products" (PPO, POS, etc.) in other managed
care and non-managed care populations.
This paper ultimately makes two comments that we would like to hear
echo down the halls of managed care:
"We are somewhat puzzled by the relatively low proportion of HMO
members who chose chiropractic care for back pain when compared with
published figures.3 This phenomenon merits additional study in our sample.
If even half the study patients treated by traditional therapies could
have been cared for in the chiropractic setting, the annual savings would
have exceeded $215,000.
"Although a larger sample of patients must be studied in order to
definitively show broad-based success, we believe that managed chiropractic
is an extremely promising method of treating acute back and neck
discomfort. We recommend its wider application by the managed care
industry and the physician community."
REFERENCES
1. Mosley, C.D., Cohen, I.G., Arnold, A.M.. Cost-effectiveness of
chiropractic care in a managed care setting. Am J Man Care 1996;2:280-282.
2. Cherkin, D.C., MacCornack, F.A.. Patient evaluations of low back pain
care from family physicians and chiropractors. West J Med 1989
Mar;150:351-355.
3 Shekelle, P.C., Markevich, H., Louie, R.. Factors associated with
choosing a chiropractor for episodes of back pain care. Med Care
1995:33;843-850.
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