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OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE 101 Introduction to Osteopathic Medicine for Allopathic Physicians STFM Annual Meeting May, 2008 Baltimore, MD.

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Presentation on theme: "OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE 101 Introduction to Osteopathic Medicine for Allopathic Physicians STFM Annual Meeting May, 2008 Baltimore, MD."— Presentation transcript:

1 OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE 101 Introduction to Osteopathic Medicine for Allopathic Physicians STFM Annual Meeting May, 2008 Baltimore, MD

2 OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE Uniquely American Andrew Taylor Still –A visionary –Disillusioned –Sought a better way to heal patients Pioneered concept of wellness

3 OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE A philosophy, a science and an art

4 OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE A philosophy, a science and an art Embraces concept of unity of body structure and function in health and disease

5 OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE A philosophy, a science and an art Embraces concept of unity of body structure and function in health and disease Health based on body’s natural capacity to resist and combat noxious influences

6 OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE A philosophy, a science and an art Embraces concept of unity of body structure and function in health and disease Health based on body’s natural capacity to resist and combat noxious influences Disease begins when natural capacity is upset

7 OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE A philosophy, a science and an art Embraces concept of unity of body structure and function in health and disease Health based on body’s natural capacity to resist and combat noxious influences Disease begins when natural capacity is upset Deal with patient as well as disease

8 OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS Work in partnership with their patients Focus on osteopathic principles when providing medical care to patients

9 OSTEOPATHIC PRINCIPLES Human Body

10 OSTEOPATHIC PRINCIPLES Human Body Unit of Mind, Body and Spirit

11 OSTEOPATHIC PRINCIPLES Human Body Unit of Mind, Body and Spirit Structure and Function are Reciprocally Interrelated

12 OSTEOPATHIC PRINCIPLES Human Body Capable of Self-regulation Self-healing Health maintenance Unit of Mind, Body and Spirit Structure and Function are Reciprocally Interrelated

13 OSTEOPATHIC PRINCIPLES Human Body Capable of Self-regulation Self-healing Health maintenance Unit of Mind, Body and Spirit Structure and Function are Reciprocally Interrelated Rational Treatment Based on understanding of these Osteopathic principles

14 COMPONENTS OF ILLNESS MUSCULOSKELETAL COMPONENT MEDICAL DIAGNOSIS/ DISEASE COMPONENT Musculoskeletal Component: muscle pain, low back pain, somatic reflex, etc. Medical Diagnosis / Disease Component: asthma, kidney stone, ileus, etc.

15 COMPONENTS OF ILLNESS (KS) Musculoskeletal Component: muscle pain, low back pain, somatic reflex, etc. Medical Diagnosis / Disease Component: asthma, kidney stone, ileus, etc. MUSCULOSKELETAL COMPONENT MEDICAL DIAGNOSIS/ DISEASE COMPONENT

16 COMPONENTS OF ILLNESS (LBP) MUSCULOSKELETAL COMPONENT MEDICAL DIAGNOSIS/ DISEASE COMPONENT Musculoskeletal Component: muscle pain, low back pain, somatic reflex, etc. Medical Diagnosis / Disease Component: asthma, kidney stone, ileus, etc.

17 COMPONENTS OF ILLNESS MUSCULOSKELETAL COMPONENT Treated with OMT Treated with many modalities: medicine, rest, surgery, physical therapy, psychotherapy MEDICAL DIAGNOSIS/DISEASE COMPONENT Musculoskeletal Component: muscle pain, low back pain, somatic reflex, etc. Medical Diagnosis / Disease Component: asthma, kidney stone, ileus, etc.

18 OSTEOPATHIC FACTOID Osteopathic physicians are one of the fastest growing segments of health care clinicians 1994 15 colleges of osteopathic medicine 2008 23 colleges with 3 additional branch campuses Additional colleges on the horizon

19 OSTEOPATHIC FACTOID Approximately 50,5000 osteopathic physicians in active practice in US Approximately 50% of osteopathic physicians choose to practice in primary care disciplines of family medicine, general internal medicine and general pediatrics Osteopathic physicians are about 5% of US primary care physicians, but account for almost 10% of all patient visits to primary care clinicians

20 OSTEOPATHIC FACTOIDS Almost 45% of osteopathic physicians practice family medicine/general medicine 9.5% of osteopathic physicians practice general internal medicine Pediatricians comprise 4.2% of osteopathic physicians 58.7% of osteopathic physicians practice in primary care specialties

21 OSTEOPATHIC FACTOID Osteopathic physicians represent >6% of total US physicians

22 OSTEOPATHIC FACTOIDS 8% of military physicians are osteopathic physicians—larger percent than general population Osteopathic physicians represent 15% of physicians in small towns and rural areas Annually >8% of all physician visits are made to osteopathic physicians

23 MORE SIMILAR THAN DIFFERENT Osteopathic and Allopathic medical school pre- med requirements equal Medical school lasts 4 years following completion of undergraduate degree for both Medical school curriculum similar with exception of OMM/OMT/OPP –Osteopathic students spend 200-600 hours of training on this

24 MORE SIMILAR THAN DIFFERENT Both must pass state licensing requirements Both complete post-graduate residency training, the length of which is specialty-dependent, and many complete allopathic residency programs Both practice in fully accredited/licensed facilities Osteopathic medicine comprises a separate but equal branch of American medical care Both have increasing number of graduates entering specialty fields

25 VALUE ADDED BY OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS Emphasis on primary care specialties

26 VALUE ADDED BY OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS Emphasis on primary care specialties Practice “whole person” approach

27 VALUE ADDED BY OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS Emphasis on primary care specialties Practice “whole person” approach Focus on preventative health

28 VALUE ADDED BY OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS Emphasis on primary care specialties Practice “whole person” approach Focus on preventative health Incorporate OMT into daily practice

29 MOST OBVIOUS DIFFERENCE O steopathic M anipulative T reatment (OMT) A.K.A. O steopathic M anipulative M edicine (OMM)

30 SOMATIC DYSFUNCTION Impaired or altered function of related components of somatic system (body framework) –Skeletal structures –Myofascial structures –Related vascular, lymphatic & neural elements

31 SOMATIC DYSFUNCTION Parameters to describe somatic dysfunction –Position of element –Direction in which motion is freer –Direction in which motion is restricted

32 SOMATIC DYSFUNCTION Diagnosis of somatic dysfunction –A symmetry –R estricted Range of Motion –T issue Texture Changes

33 SOMATIC DYSFUNCTION Motions –Flexion –Extension –Side-bending –Rotation –Translation

34 BARRIERS TO MOTION Anatomic Barrier Physiologic Barrier Restrictive Barrier Anatomic Physiologic Restrictive Physiologic Anatomic Barrier Barrier Barrier Barrier Barrier

35 FORCES APPLIED IN OMT Extrinsic –Supplied by physician Thrusting Springing Traction Gravity Mechanical Table Intrinsic –Supplied by patient Homeostatic Respiration Muscle Contraction

36 SAFETY of OMT Low rate of complications –1 in 1 million treatments Can be controlled by careful selection of patients and modalities utilized

37 SAFETY of OMT Most commonly reported complications –Vertebrovascular accidents –Cauda Equina Syndrome Modality most associated with complications is HVLA

38 CONTRAINDICATIONS Severe rheumatoid arthritis Fracture Severe osteoporosis Primary bone tumor Bone metastases Acute herniated nucleus pulposis Cervical stenosis Vascular insufficiency

39 CONTRAINDICATIONS Bleeding disorder / Anticoagulation status Osteomyelitis Ocular lens implant (early post-op period) CVA Downs Syndrome Ehler-Danlos Syndrome with atlanto- axial ligament involvement

40 PHYSICAL DETERMINANTS of MANIPULATIVE PROCEDURES History & Physical Exam Passive mobility testing Identification of motion restriction Localization of forces Gentle application of force Retest passive mobility

41 TYPES OF OMT Direct Techniques –work toward area of restriction Indirect Techniques –work away from area of restriction

42 FACULTY SUPERVISION - 1 OMT is a procedure with own CPT codes For billing – must be observed by faculty when performed by a resident –Resident may be credentialed depending on program set-up Observing / billing physician not required to be a DO

43 FACULTY SUPERVISION - 2 SUGGESTIONS: –Ask resident to describe dysfunction and/or demonstrate it to you –Have resident place your hands on palpated abnormality and have resident explain mechanism of the abnormality –Ask resident to discuss set-up while being performed –Observe technique –Observe recheck of patient

44 OMT ADMINISTRIVIA OMT is a procedure with own CPT codes For billing – must be observed by faculty when performed by a resident Observing / billing physician not required to be an osteopathic physician

45 OMT ADMINISTRIVIA All OMT created equal in terms of coding –Billed by number of body regions treated CPT coding (98925 – 98929) based on # regions treated –May include E&M code with –25 modifier –ICD-9 Codes exist 739._ : Non-allopathic lesions (NOC) including segmental dysfunction and somatic dysfunction

46 OMT ADMINISTRIVIA DOCUMENTATION Couple of options –SOAP note style –OMT Documentation Sheets –May see notations like: C3-7 SB R R R Should include follow-up for re-evaluation and treatment if needed

47

48 CREDITS: Photos used are stock pictures Graph reproduced with permission from American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine


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