PLoS ONE (Jan 2024)

What's the harm? Results of an active surveillance adverse event reporting system for chiropractors and physiotherapists.

  • Katherine A Pohlman,
  • Martha Funabashi,
  • Maeve O'Beirne,
  • J David Cassidy,
  • Michael D Hill,
  • Eric L Hurwitz,
  • Gregory Kawchuk,
  • Silvano Mior,
  • Quazi Ibrahim,
  • Haymo Thiel,
  • Michael Westaway,
  • Jerome Yager,
  • Sunita Vohra

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0309069
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 8
p. e0309069

Abstract

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This prospective, community-based, active surveillance study aimed to report the incidence of moderate, severe, and serious adverse events (AEs) after chiropractic (n = 100) / physiotherapist (n = 50) visit in offices throughout North America between October-2015 and December-2017. Three content-validated questionnaires were used to collect AE information: two completed by the patient (pre-treatment [T0] and 2-7 days post-treatment [T2]) and one completed by the provider immediately post-treatment [T1]. Any new or worsened symptom was considered an AE and further classified as mild, moderate, severe or serious. From the 42 participating providers (31 chiropractors; 11 physiotherapists), 3819 patient visits had complete T0 and T1 assessments. The patients were on average 50±18 years of age and 62.5% females. Neck/back pain was the most common presenting condition (70.0%) with 24.3% of patients reporting no condition/preventative care. From the patients visits with a complete T2 assessment (n = 2136 patient visits, 55.9%), 21.3% reported an AE, of which: 7.9% were mild, 6.2% moderate, 3.7% severe, 1.5% serious, and 2.0% had missing severity rating. The most common symptoms reported with moderate or higher severity were discomfort/pain, stiffness, difficulty walking and headache. This study provides valuable information for patients and providers regarding incidence and severity of AEs following patient visits in multiple community-based professions. These findings can be used to inform patients of what AEs may occur and future research opportunities can focus on mitigating common AEs.