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Purpose: Musculoskeletal injuries affect up to 13% of adults annually. Despite this high incidence, quality of primary care, including analgesia, may be sub-optimal. The goal of this study is to describe the quality of primary care for ambulatory patients with isolated limb injury and to identify related factors.
Method: A cross sectional study was undertaken on 166 consecutive ambulatory adult patients with isolated limb injury who presented to orthopedics service in a Level one Trauma Centre. Quality of care was assessed by evaluating analgesia, walking aids, immobilization, and quality of referral diagnosis according to actual expert recommendations. Patient satisfaction was assessed by Visit Satisfaction Questionnaire.
Results: This study revealed low quality of primary care for more than 50% of injured patients. More than half the patients had pain level over 5/10 and more than a quarter had insufficient/absent analgesia prescriptions. A third had unacceptable immobilization and 36% of patients with a lower limb injury did not receive a walking aid prescription. A total of 37% had an absent or inadequate referral diagnosis. Factors associated with lower quality depended on the specific quality indicator and included: living further away from the hospital, younger age, initially consulting at another health care center, having a fracture, and being a smoker.
Conclusion: The high frequency of low quality of care underlines the necessity for orthopedic surgeons to be involved in primary care education. Identifying factors associated with lower quality of care will orient efforts to improve medical care of patients with isolated traumatic injury.