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Abstract Number: 1093

Effectiveness of the Outreach Model for Rheumatology Specialty Clinics to On-Reserve First Nations in Canada: System-Level and Individual Measures of Performance and Outcomes

Sujay Nagaraj1, Claire Barber2, Margaret Kargard3, Tyler White3 and Cheryl Barnabe4, 1McCaig Institute for Bone and Joint Health, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada, 2Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada, 3Siksika Health Services, Siksika, AB, Canada, 4Department of Community Health Sciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada

Meeting: 2017 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting

Date of first publication: September 18, 2017

Keywords: health disparities, inflammatory arthritis, Native Americans, outcome measures and population studies

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Session Information

Date: Monday, November 6, 2017

Title: Measures and Measurement of Healthcare Quality Poster I

Session Type: ACR Poster Session B

Session Time: 9:00AM-11:00AM

Background/Purpose: Inflammatory arthritis (IA) disproportionately affects Canada’s First Nations population. A Model of Care (MoC) consisting of rheumatology specialty services embedded in the primary care context on-reserve was instituted to reduce barriers to care and improve treatment outcomes. This study assessed the system-level performance of the MoC as well as its effectiveness on disease activity measures and patient-reported outcomes over 7 years (2011 – 2017) at one centre.

Methods: Patients with incident and prevalent IA were enrolled in a longitudinal cohort. Clinical characteristics, disease activity measures, and treatment recommendations were systematically recorded over follow-up. System-level performance was evaluated according to established measures including: wait times for new referral, proportion of patients seen in yearly follow-up, proportion of patients prescribed DMARD treatment, and time to DMARD initiation. Treatment escalation (new DMARD or biologic prescribed) was characterized in relation to disease activity state at each visit. Mixed-model regression was performed to determine rates of change for disease activity measures over time, with adjustment for baseline demographics and disease activity measures.

Results: 59 participants (78% female, mean age 47 (SD 13)) with IA (n=39 RA, n=7 PsA, n=7 SLE and related CTD, n=3 JIA, n=1 SpA, n=2 crystal arthritis; 29 with incident and 30 with prevalent disease, mean 16 (SD 13) years duration) were followed for a mean of 29 (SD 23) months with a mean of 6 (SD 5) visits per participant.

At the system-level, the 50th and 90th percentile wait times were 69 and 695 days, respectively. Only 33% of patients were seen in the benchmark waiting time of 4 weeks but 83% of patients were followed up in each measurement year. Nearly all (96%) of patients received a DMARD in each measurement year and 90% were prescribed a DMARD within 2 weeks of diagnosis.

At the baseline visit, 70% of participants were in DAS28 moderate or high disease activity. Treatment was escalated at 60% of visits where the individual was in moderate or high disease activity. Swollen and tender joint counts significantly improved during follow-up (SJC28 adjusted slope -0.16, 95%CI -0.27 to -0.05, p=0.004; TJC28 adjusted slope -0.16, 95%CI -0.32 to -0.0057, p=0.04.). Pain (adjusted slope -0.014, 95%CI -0.70 to -0.04, p=0.62), MD Global (adjusted slope -0.028, 95%CI -0.095 to 0.040, p=0.42), HAQ (adjusted slope 0.0028, 95%CI -0.0088 to 0.014, p=0.64), and DAS28 (adjusted slope -0.038, 95% CI -0.078 to 0.0016, p=0.060) did not significantly improve over time. Patient global continued to increase over time (adjusted slope 0.081, 95%CI 0.025 to 0.137, p=0.005). No significant differences were found in a sensitivity analysis comparing outcomes for incident and prevalent patients.

Conclusion: Evaluation of the MoC highlighted areas for further improvement. The program met several system-level performance measure targets however patients still experience long wait times. Despite improvement in swollen and tender joint counts, disease activity measures and patient-reported outcomes did not significantly improve during follow-up. This suggests that there are still gaps in meeting relevant outcomes.


Disclosure: S. Nagaraj, None; C. Barber, None; M. Kargard, None; T. White, None; C. Barnabe, None.

To cite this abstract in AMA style:

Nagaraj S, Barber C, Kargard M, White T, Barnabe C. Effectiveness of the Outreach Model for Rheumatology Specialty Clinics to On-Reserve First Nations in Canada: System-Level and Individual Measures of Performance and Outcomes [abstract]. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2017; 69 (suppl 10). https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/effectiveness-of-the-outreach-model-for-rheumatology-specialty-clinics-to-on-reserve-first-nations-in-canada-system-level-and-individual-measures-of-performance-and-outcomes/. Accessed .
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