• J Manipulative Physiol Ther · Jun 2008

    Comparative Study

    Manual therapy provided by physical therapists in a hospital-based setting: a retrospective analysis.

    • Chad Cook, Amy Cook, and Teddy Worrell.
    • Department of Surgery, Center for Excellence in Surgical Outcomes, Durham, NC, USA. chad.cook@duke.edu
    • J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2008 Jun 1;31(5):338-43.

    ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to compare outcomes, complications, and hospital disposition in a cohort of patients hospitalized for low back pain who receive physical therapist (PT)-administered manual therapy (mobilization and manipulation) vs those who do not receive manual therapy.MethodsThe study was a retrospective data collection that used the Nationwide Inpatient Sample. Seventy-five patients hospitalized with low back pain who receive PT-administered manual therapy were matched using specific covariates with patients with low back who did not receive manual therapy. Bivariate analyses and regression modeling were used to determine comparisons between the 2 groups.ResultsFindings indicated that patients who received PT manual therapy had significantly longer lengths of hospital stay (P < .01) and had significantly higher inflation-adjusted costs of care (P < .01). After regression modeling and adjustments for covariates, findings for length of stay were still higher in the PT manual therapy group (P < .01), but costs were significantly lower for this group (P < .01). There were minimal findings of complications.ConclusionsOf 106 340 patients admitted for low back pain originally queried, only 75 patients (0.07%) received manual therapy, a markedly small number of patients. Outcomes may be reflective of the low effect size of manual therapy in a hospital setting or the inability to control for referral and hospital care patterns, thus disallowing appropriate matching.

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