The impact of an online adult headache guideline on headache referrals to the neurology clinic.


Journal

Internal medicine journal
ISSN: 1445-5994
Titre abrégé: Intern Med J
Pays: Australia
ID NLM: 101092952

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Aug 2021
Historique:
revised: 15 06 2020
received: 31 03 2020
accepted: 18 06 2020
pubmed: 17 11 2020
medline: 21 9 2021
entrez: 16 11 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Headache is a common problem in primary care and one of the main reasons general practitioners (GP) consult the neurology service. We developed an online adult headache guideline (Supporting Information Appendix S1) for the greater Wellington Region as a resource for GP to guide identification of concerning headaches, initiation of prophylactic medications for migraine and management of analgesic overuse headache. To examine the effectiveness of this adult headache guideline in reducing demand on the neurology outpatient service for headache patients that could readily be managed in primary care. We reviewed electronic referrals to Wellington Hospital's neurology department before and after the implementation of the online headache guideline. The primary outcome was the proportion of referrals for headache. Secondary outcomes included proportion of referrals requiring clinic review, rate of pre-referral trial of headache prophylactic medication and medication overuse headache diagnosed at neurological consultation. Nine hundred neurology referrals before and 801 referrals after the publication of the online headache guideline were included. There was a statistically significant reduction in proportion of referrals for headache (15.4% vs 11.7%; P = 0.026). There was neither an increased rate of pre-referral adequate prophylactic medication trial (33.8% vs 27.7%; P = 0.320) nor fewer medication overuse headaches diagnosed during the neurology assessment (21.9% vs 25.0%; P = 0.674). The launch of an online headache guideline was associated with a reduction in demand on neurology service. Further education could improve the utilisation of this guideline, to avoid delays in prophylactic treatment and reduce the harm of medication overuse.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Headache is a common problem in primary care and one of the main reasons general practitioners (GP) consult the neurology service. We developed an online adult headache guideline (Supporting Information Appendix S1) for the greater Wellington Region as a resource for GP to guide identification of concerning headaches, initiation of prophylactic medications for migraine and management of analgesic overuse headache.
AIMS OBJECTIVE
To examine the effectiveness of this adult headache guideline in reducing demand on the neurology outpatient service for headache patients that could readily be managed in primary care.
METHODS METHODS
We reviewed electronic referrals to Wellington Hospital's neurology department before and after the implementation of the online headache guideline. The primary outcome was the proportion of referrals for headache. Secondary outcomes included proportion of referrals requiring clinic review, rate of pre-referral trial of headache prophylactic medication and medication overuse headache diagnosed at neurological consultation.
RESULTS RESULTS
Nine hundred neurology referrals before and 801 referrals after the publication of the online headache guideline were included. There was a statistically significant reduction in proportion of referrals for headache (15.4% vs 11.7%; P = 0.026). There was neither an increased rate of pre-referral adequate prophylactic medication trial (33.8% vs 27.7%; P = 0.320) nor fewer medication overuse headaches diagnosed during the neurology assessment (21.9% vs 25.0%; P = 0.674).
CONCLUSION CONCLUSIONS
The launch of an online headache guideline was associated with a reduction in demand on neurology service. Further education could improve the utilisation of this guideline, to avoid delays in prophylactic treatment and reduce the harm of medication overuse.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33196138
doi: 10.1111/imj.14959
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1251-1254

Informations de copyright

© 2020 Royal Australasian College of Physicians.

Références

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de Toledo M, Saiz-Díaz RA, Pérez-Martínez DA, Calandre L, Bermejo F. Guidelines for headaches and dizziness for general physicians: analysis of their impact on visit frequency to outpatient neurological ambulatory services. Neurologia 1999; 14: 102-6.
Pedraza MI, Herrero-Velázquez S, López-Mesonero L, Ruiz-Piñero M, Posadas J, Guerrero-Peral AL. Email in a dedicated headache clinic: experience gained over a five-year period. Rev Neurol 2015; 60: 543-7.
Bradi AC, Sitwell L, Liddy C, Afkham A, Keely E. Ask a neurologist: what primary care providers ask, and reducing referrals through eConsults. Neurol Clin Pract 2018; 8: 186-91.
Lip SZL, Miller SL, Tyagi A. Audit of headache referrals from primary care to a regional headache service. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2013: 84e2.
Dodick D, Freitag F. Evidence-based understanding of medication-overuse headache: clinical implications. Headache 2006; 46: S202-11.
Dowson AJ. Analysis of the patients attending a specialist UKheadache clinic over a 3-year period. Headache 2003; 43: 14-8.
Jelinski SE, Becker WJ, Christie SN, Giammarco R, Mackie GF, Gawel MJ et al. Demographics and clinical features of patients referred to headache specialists. Can J Neurol Sci 2006; 33: 228-34.

Auteurs

Leon Huang (L)

Department of Neurology, Wellington Regional Hospital, Wellington, New Zealand.

David Bourke (D)

Department of Neurology, Wellington Regional Hospital, Wellington, New Zealand.

Annemarei Ranta (A)

Department of Neurology, Wellington Regional Hospital, Wellington, New Zealand.
Department of Medicine, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.

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