Reinforcing informed medication prescription for low back pain in the emergency department (RIME): a controlled interrupted time series implementation study protocol

Author:

O'Leary ShaunORCID,Heine Janelle,Warren Jacelle,Smyth Tanya,Ballard Emma,Mitchell Gary,See William,Barlas Panos,Machado Gustavo CORCID,Cottrell Michelle,Comans Tracy,Foster Nadine E

Abstract

IntroductionManagement guidelines for low back pain (LBP) recommend exclusion of serious pathology, followed by simple analgesics, superficial heat therapy, early mobilisation and patient education. An audit in a large metropolitan hospital emergency department (ED) revealed high rates of non-recommended medication prescription for LBP (65% of patients prescribed opioids, 17% prescribed benzodiazepines), high inpatient admission rates (20% of ED LBP patients), delayed patient mobilisation (on average 6 hours) and inadequate patient education (48% of patients). This study aims to improve medication prescription for LBP in this ED by implementing an intervention shown previously to improve guideline-based management of LBP in other Australian EDs.Methods and analysisA controlled interrupted time series study will evaluate the intervention in the ED before (24 weeks; 20 March 2023–3 September 2023) and after (24 weeks; 27 November 2024–12 May 2024) implementation (12 weeks; 4 September 2023–26 November 2023), additionally comparing findings with another ED in the same health service. The multicomponent implementation strategy uses a formalised clinical flow chart to support clinical decision-making and aims to change clinician behaviour, through clinician education, provision of alternative treatments, educational resources, audit and feedback, supported by implementation champions. The primary outcome is the percentage of LBP patients prescribed non-recommended medications (opioids, benzodiazepines and/or gabapentinoids), assessed via routinely collected ED data. Anticipated sample size is 2000 patients (n=1000 intervention, n=1000 control) based on average monthly admissions of LBP presentations in the EDs. Secondary outcomes include inpatient admission rate, time to mobilisation, provision of patient education, imaging requests, representation to the ED within 6 months and healthcare costs. In nested qualitative research, we will study ED clinicians’ perceptions of the implementation and identify how benefits can be sustained over time.Ethics and disseminationThis study received ethical approval from the Metro North Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC/2022/MNHA/87995). Study findings will be published in peer-reviewed journals and presented at international conferences and educational workshops.Trial registration numberACTRN12622001536752.

Funder

HCF Research Foundation

Publisher

BMJ

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