In authors or contributors

An initiative to improve equity, timeliness and access to District Health Board-funded physiotherapy in Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
An initiative to improve equity, timeliness and access to District Health Board-funded physiotherapy in Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand
Abstract
ABSTRACT Background and context General practice teams frequently request orthopaedic and musculoskeletal physiotherapy. In the Canterbury District Health Board (DHB) region, before November 2018, the criteria for DHB-funded physiotherapy were unclear. Wait times were many months. Care was provided on hospital sites. Limited data were available about the service. Assessment of problem A clinical project group including private and DHB hospital physiotherapists and general practitioners was established. Patients requiring orthopaedic and musculoskeletal physiotherapy who had certain criteria were seen by physiotherapists in contracted private clinics in the community instead of by physiotherapists in hospital departments. Patients received up to NZ$300 (excluding GST) of care. A claiming process was established that required the physiotherapy clinics to provide data on patient outcomes. Results In the first 12 months of the programme, 1229 requests were accepted. Patients waited an average of 11.1 days for their first appointment. There was an average Patient Specific Functional Scale increase of 3.7 after treatment. Strategies for improvement A change environment was critical for this community-based, geographically distributed model to succeed. It was supported by key clinicians and funders with sufficient authority to make changes as required. It required ongoing clinical oversight and operational support. Lessons DHB orthopaedic and musculoskeletal physiotherapy can be moved from hospital sites to a community-based, distributed service in a timely, effective and equitable fashion. There was a prompt time to treatment. Data collection was improved by tracking ‘before’ and ‘after’ measures.
Publication
Journal of Primary Health Care
Publisher
CSIRO PUBLISHING
Date
2020/12/16
Journal Abbr
J Prim Health Care
Accessed
12/21/20, 8:52 PM
ISSN
1172-6156
Language
en
Library Catalog
Notes

Study topic
Implementation and evaluation of a community-based physiotherapy service model to improve access, equity, and timeliness for DHB-funded musculoskeletal care in Canterbury.

Study type
Descriptive service redesign and audit.

Key findings

  • A new referral model enabled general practice teams to request DHB-funded musculoskeletal physiotherapy via a simplified process, with criteria published on Community HealthPathways.
  • Accepted patients were seen in community-based private clinics, reducing average wait times to 11.1 days and achieving an average Patient Specific Functional Scale improvement of 3.7.
  • The initiative improved geographic equity by allowing rural patients to access care locally, and supported system-wide goals of timely, community-based care.
  • Data collection and outcome tracking were strengthened through a structured claiming process, addressing previous gaps in service-level data.
  • Community HealthPathways played a key role in communicating eligibility criteria and service updates to general practice teams.
Citation
McGonigle, L., & McGeoch, G. (2020). An initiative to improve equity, timeliness and access to District Health Board-funded physiotherapy in Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand. Journal of Primary Health Care. https://doi.org/10.1071/HC20074