The investigators will be enrolling children with distal radius buckle fractures, treating them with a removable splint and randomizing them to follow up as needed vs required follow up with a primary care physician 1-2 weeks after the ED visit.
Buckle fractures of the distal forearm that include the radius are the most common fracture in childhood, and the risk of this fracture occurring is about 1 in every 25 children.Despite the high frequency of this fracture, it is a very stable injury and thus can be safely treated with a removable wrist splint while the fracture heals. Furthermore, authors have concluded that since orthopedic intervention is exceedingly rare, this type of fracture may safely be followed by a primary care physician (PCP) or managed at home. In Canada, about 50% of these injuries are routinely discharged from the ED for follow up with the PCP, instead of an orthopedic clinic. The investigators' work examined the management outcomes of 180 children with a distal radius buckle fractures who were treated in an ED with a removable splint, given anticipatory guidance, and advised to follow up in two weeks with their PCP. We demonstrated that PCP follow up was safe and effective, with about 90% of patients completing their care at the PCP without additional visits to an ED or orthopedic surgeon. All patients recovered as expected without complications. However, about 50% of these patients did not receive additional anticipatory guidance from their PCPs on duration of splint use or expected timing of return to usual activities at the PCP visit. Nevertheless, patients with and without this additional anticipatory guidance reported a similar duration of splint use and timing for return to usual activities, largely based on what was recommended at the ED visit. Since these injuries are inherently stable, carry an excellent prognosis, and are treated with a splint that can be removed at home in accordance with anticipatory guidance provided in the ED, it calls into question the need for any routine physician follow up of these common minor fractures. If home management of distal radius buckle fracture after ED discharge demonstrated safety and effectiveness in a methodologically robust study, it would have clear advantages for patients and families, physicians, and the health care system. The frustrations of lengthy clinic visits and transport difficulties would be avoided. Parents would miss less time away from work or other priorities, and the patients themselves would not miss school. In medically under-serviced communities in particular, patients would avoid long travel distances to see a physician for this minor injury where physician intervention after the ED visit is rarely required. Furthermore, it will obviate the need to shift the care of these common minor fractures from the orthopedic surgeon to the PCP, relieving some pressure on health care practitioners and increase availability for other patients more in need of physician services. Importantly, the potential for reduced use of superfluous health care services for this common injury is also likely to result in health care cost savings.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
149
The intervention will be method of follow up.
Kathy Boutis
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Activity Scales for Kids - Performance Version, which is a validated activity scale that measures the ability of a child's physical function
The Activity Scales for Kids is a validated activity scale that measures a child's physical function
Time frame: Three weeks post injury
Proportion of children with splint use "almost all of the time" > 3 weeks duration
The investigators will ask parents at three weeks if they use the splint, "almost never," "sometimes," "frequently," or "almost all of the time."
Time frame: 12 weeks
Proportion of children who received unscheduled visits to a physician for the index wrist injury, obtained by parental report and Canadian Institute of Health Information data
At 12 weeks, the investigators will determine which children visited a physician for the index wrist injury as per parental report and/or data available from CIHI
Time frame: 12 weeks
Proportion of parents who rated the satisfaction with their care as "very satisfied/satisfied."
The investigators will ask parents to rate the satisfaction with their care at 4 weeks on the following scale: "unsatisfied," somewhat satisfied," and "very satisfied."
Time frame: 4 weeks
Health Economic Evaluation - dollar values will be obtained for patient and health care costs and compared between the groups.
The investigators will determine costs of patient and health care events using available sources for this information.
Time frame: 12 weeks
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