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Letters to the Editor to:
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- Scientific Articles:
Joseph R. Lynch, Gregory A. Schmale, Douglas C. Schaad, and Seth S. Leopold
- Important Demographic Variables Impact the Musculoskeletal Knowledge and Confidence of Academic Primary Care Physicians
J Bone Joint Surg Am 2006; 88: 1589-1595
[Abstract]
[Full text]
[PDF]
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Electronic letters published:
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Dr. Lynch and colleagues respond to Dr. Gardner
- Joseph R. Lynch, MD, Gregory A. Schmale, MD, Douglas C. Schaad, PhD, and Seth S. Leoplod, MD
(15 August 2006)
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Knowing what our primary care providers need to know
- Gregory C. Gardner, M.D., FACP
(31 July 2006)
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Dr. Lynch and colleagues respond to Dr. Gardner |
15 August 2006 |
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Joseph R. Lynch, MD, Resident Physician, PGY-5 Dept. Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA, Gregory A. Schmale, MD, Douglas C. Schaad, PhD, and Seth S. Leoplod, MD
Send letter to journal:
Re: Dr. Lynch and colleagues respond to Dr. Gardner
joelynch{at}u.washington.edu Joseph R. Lynch, MD, et al.
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We thank Dr. Gardner for his thoughtful comments concerning our
paper and we agree that this issue warrants further study.
Dr. Gardner’s first concern is that the 25-item test originally
created by Drs. Freedman and Bernstein does not accurately reflect the
musculoskeletal knowledge required of practicing primary care physicians.
The specific issue is that some questions concerned topics in orthopaedic
trauma, which may be beyond the scope of practice of some primary care
providers. Indeed, a minority of the questions do refer to musculoskeletal
trauma (36%, 9 of 25 questions). However, these particular questions do
not ask the primary care physician for management decisions; rather, they test
the ability of the physician to recognize orthopaedic emergencies and identify the anatomic
structures that might be in jeopardy when these emergencies occur. While
this might not be relevant to the practice of every provider, certainly
these issues are likely to come up in the practices of primary care
physicians whose scope of practice includes covering high school sports
teams, urgent care facilities, and walk-in clinics. Perhaps more
importantly, it is worth recognizing that the remainder of the examination
– approximately two-thirds of the overall test – covered what would be
considered “general practice” by any definition, including diagnoses such
as arthritis, compressive neuropathies, back pain, health maintenance
screening as it relates to the musculoskeletal system, and common
infectious and oncological concerns. The initial evaluation, treatment,
and appropriate referral of these conditions are routinely performed by
primary care physicians. In fact, the physicians tested in this study
performed worse on questions dealing with office-based musculoskeletal
care than they did with orthopaedic emergencies. For instance, 89% of
participating physicians were able to recognize compartment syndrome as a
surgical emergency needing appropriate referral; however, only 58% of the
providers understood the difference between osteoporosis and osteomalacia.
This must be considered within the purview of a primary care physician,
given that osteoporosis in one study was the third most common
musculoskeletal problem addressed by primary care physicians(1). Lastly, to
our knowledge, the test instrument created by Drs. Freedman and Bernstein
is the only previously published, field-tested examination of
musculoskeletal knowledge that has been endorsed by program directors of
internal medicine programs from across the country, who, incidentally
weighted the importance of this test more heavily than originally weighted
by the test’s creators(2).
Of course, Dr. Gardner is right that no exam can cover all topics,
and none can be completely relevant to all providers. We also agree that
there might be other examinations that could be developed to test
particular groups of primary care providers, or examinations that
emphasize different kinds of musculoskeletal content. We encourage Dr.
Gardner and others interested in these topics to write – and importantly,
to validate – other test instruments; and to examine perhaps other
populations to see whether the findings we observed at a top academic
primary care program generalize well to other physician populations. If
such validation can be made, perhaps it will prompt the changes not only
to medical school education, but to graduate medical education and
continuing medical education that our work suggests is also necessary.
Again, we thank Dr. Gardner for his interest, and encourage his work
toward the creation of evidence-based assessment tools that will help
improve the musculoskeletal knowledge and confidence of primary care
providers.
References:
1. Lynch, J. R.; Gardner, G. C.; and Parsons, R. R.: Musculoskeletal
workload versus musculoskeletal clinical confidence among primary care
physicians in rural practice. Am J Orthop, 34(10): 487-91, discussion 491-
2, 2005.
2. Freedman, K. B., and Bernstein, J.: Educational deficiencies in
musculoskeletal medicine. J Bone Joint Surg Am, 84-A(4): 604-8, 2002. |
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Knowing what our primary care providers need to know |
31 July 2006 |
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Gregory C. Gardner, M.D., FACP, Professor of Medicine, Adjunct Professor of Orthopaedics & Rehabilitation Medicine University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195
Send letter to journal:
Re: Knowing what our primary care providers need to know
rheumdoc{at}u.washington.edu Gregory C. Gardner, M.D., FACP
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To The Editor:
I applaud the efforts of Lynch and colleagues for further
enlightening
us on the crisis in musculoskeletal education in the US. Their article
indicates
the lack of a consistent basic fund of musculoskeletal knowledge for our
medical providers that our medical schools should be providing to every
graduate. I do have several comments.
As a rheumatologist who has spent his entire career educating
internal
medicine residents in the area of musculoskeletal medicine, I do not think
the
Freedman and Bernstein 25 item assesment test (1) accurately reflects the
issues
most primary care internist face in practice. It is a one size fits all
test and is
really an orthopaedic assessment that is heavily weighted toward
orthopaedic
trauma (9/25 items). While this may be more relevant to certain primary
care
providers (family practice physicians or rural internists) it does not
reflect the
musculoskeletal problems seen on a daily or weekly basis by most primary
care internists. I know chairs of mecical departments endorsed the test but I am not
sure in
most cases they would be the best group to evaluate orthopaedic issues. I
understand a more directed assessment is under study currently.
My second comment is more general. In Lynch's previous paper on
this
topic (2), he deliniated what a rural internist was actually seeing in clinic
with
regard to musculoskeletal problems. I think this type of information
should
be our starting point for teaching future generations of primary care
providers. Teaching should address their future needs rather than be based on a hypothetical
curriculum
generated by expert opinion and panels. While a good place to start,
this
cannot substitute for evidence based curriculum development. Knowing what
they need to know will help us know what to teach and allow us to develop
more useful assessment tools.
The author(s) of this letter to the editor did not receive payment or other benefits or a commitment or agreement to provide such benefits from a commercial entity. No commercial entity paid or directed, or agreed to pay or direct, any benefits to any research fund, foundation, educational institution, or other charitable or nonprofit organization with which the author(s) are affiliated or associated.
References:
1. Freedman, KB, Bernstein J. The adequacy of medical school education in musculoskeletal medicine. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 1998;80:1421-7.
2. Lynch Jr, Gardner GC, Parsons RR. Musculoskeletal workload versus musculoskeletal clinical confidence among primary care physicians in rural practice. Am J Orthop. 2005;34:487-92. |
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