Open Access
Incident osteoarthritis associated with increased allied health services use in ‘baby boomer’ Australian women
Author(s) -
Parkinson Lynne,
Moorin Rachael,
Peeters Geeske,
Byles Julie,
Blyth Fiona,
Caughey Gillian,
Cunich Michelle,
Magin Parker,
March Lyn,
Pond Dimity
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
australian and new zealand journal of public health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.946
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1753-6405
pISSN - 1326-0200
DOI - 10.1111/1753-6405.12533
Subject(s) - medicine , osteoarthritis , health services , family medicine , gerontology , demography , physical therapy , alternative medicine , environmental health , population , pathology , sociology
Abstract Objective : To explore impact of incident osteoarthritis (OA) on health services use by Australian women born 1946–51. Methods : Secondary analysis of Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health survey data linked to Medicare Australia databases (2002 to 2011). Medicare services use was compared for two groups: OA group (n=761) – reported incident OA in 2007; Never group (n=4346) – did not report arthritis in time frame. Interrupted time series regression compared health services use over time. Results : The OA group had higher health services use than the Never group. Rate of services use increased over time for both groups. Rate of increase in quarterly doctor attendances was significantly lower for the OA group after onset of OA, with no corresponding change for the Never group. Conclusions : A pre‐existing higher use of health services is associated with reporting incident OA, compared to those who never report arthritis. After onset of OA, rate of doctor use reduced and allied health use increased, consistent with recommended Australian treatment guidelines. Implications : This study provides a rare insight into change in healthcare use for people reporting incident OA, against an appropriate comparison group, highlighting the importance of early diagnosis of OA to optimise effective use of health services.