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Prevalence and profile of Australian osteopaths treating older people

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 19:23 authored by Amie Steel, Brett Vaughan, Paul Orrock, Wenbo Peng, Michael Fleischmann, Sandra Grace, Roger Engel, David Sibbritt, Jon Adams
Objectives: To explore the characteristics of the Australian osteopathy workforce who participate in the management of older patients with musculoskeletal complaints. Design: Secondary analysis of a cross-sectional survey of osteopaths. Setting: The Osteopathy Research and Innovation Network (ORION), an Australian practice-based research network. Main outcome measures: The demographic, practice and treatment characteristics of osteopaths who identify as ‘always'or ‘often’ treating patients aged 65 years or over. Results: Over half (58%) of total participants (n = 992) indicated often treating older people and this was associated with referral patterns with other health professionals and a non-urban practice location. Osteopaths providing care to older people were more likely to discuss diet/nutrition and medications, and provide pain counselling. Osteopaths who treated older adults were more likely to treat shoulder musculoskeletal disorders, degenerative spine disorders, chronic or persistent pain, and tendinopathies. Conclusions: A substantial proportion of Australian osteopaths treat older adults frequently. The potential value and impact of osteopathy in managing the health needs of an ageing population warrants close examination from both researchers and policy makers.

History

Journal

Complementary Therapies in Medicine

Volume

43

Start page

125

End page

130

Total pages

6

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006113321

Esploro creation date

2023-04-28

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