Strategies to Increase Access to Outpatient Physiotherapy Services: A Scoping Review
- PMID: 37323714
- PMCID: PMC10262743
- DOI: 10.3138/ptc-2020-0119
Strategies to Increase Access to Outpatient Physiotherapy Services: A Scoping Review
Abstract
Purpose: Multiple Canadian jurisdictions have curtailed public funding for outpatient physiotherapy services, impacting access and potentially creating or worsening inequities in access. We sought to identify evaluated organizational strategies that aimed to improve access to physiotherapy services for community-dwelling persons. Method: We used Arksey and O'Malley's scoping review methods, including a systematic search of CINAHL, MEDLINE, and Embase for relevant peer-reviewed texts published in English, French, or German, and we performed a qualitative content analysis of included articles. Results: Fifty-one peer-reviewed articles met inclusion criteria. Most studies of interventions or system changes to improve access took place in the United Kingdom (17), the United States (12), Australia (9), and Canada (8). Twenty-nine studies aimed to improve access for patients with musculoskeletal conditions; only five studies examined interventions to improve equitable access for underserved populations. The most common interventions and system changes studied were expanded physiotherapy roles, direct access, rapid access systems, telerehabilitation, and new community settings. Conclusions: Studies evaluating interventions and health system changes to improve access to physiotherapy services have been limited in focus, and most have neglected to address inequities in access. To improve equitable access to physiotherapy services in Canada, physiotherapy providers in local settings can implement and evaluate transferable patient-centred access strategies, particularly telerehabilitation and primary care integration.
Objectif : de multiples régions sociosanitaires canadiennes ont limité le financement des services de physiothérapie ambulatoires, ce qui a des conséquences sur l’accès et qui risque de créer ou d’aggraver les inégalités en matière d’accès. Les chercheurs ont cherché à définir les stratégies organisationnelles évaluées afin d’améliorer l’accès aux services de physiothérapie pour les personnes qui vivent dans la communauté. Méthodologie : les chercheurs ont utilisé les méthodologies d’étude de portée, y compris des recherches systématiques dans les bases de données CINAHL, MEDLINE et Embase pour en extraire les textes révisés par un comité de lecture publiés en anglais, en français ou en allemand, et ont effectué une analyse qualitative du contenu des articles extraits. Résultats : au total, 51 articles révisés par un comité de lecture respectaient les critères d’inclusion. La plupart des études sur les interventions ou les changements systémiques visant à améliorer l’accès ont été réalisées au Royaume-Uni (17), aux États-Unis (12), en Australie (9) et au Canada (8). Ainsi, 29 études ont visé à améliorer l’accès aux patients atteints d’affections musculosquelettiques; seulement cinq ont porté sur des interventions pour améliorer l’accès équitable aux populations mal desservies. Les interventions et les changements systémiques les plus courants étudiés dans le présent article ont entraîné un élargissement des rôles physiothérapiques, des systèmes d’accès direct, de la téléréadaptation et de nouveaux milieux communautaires. Conclusions :les études sur les interventions et les changements aux systèmes de santé pour améliorer l’accès aux services physiothérapiques ont eu une portée limitée, et la plupart ont négligé d’aborder les inégalités en matière d’accès. Pour améliorer un accès équitable aux services physiothérapiques au Canada, les dispensateurs de soins physiothérapiques locaux peuvent adopter et évaluer des stratégies d’accès transférables axées sur les patients, notamment la téléréadaptation et l’intégration des soins de première ligne.
Keywords: health equity; health services accessibility; health services research; physical therapy specialty; review.
© Canadian Physiotherapy Association.
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