o zone login
  1. You are at:
  2. Home
  3. Resources
  4. News
  5. New developments in collecting standardised osteopathy patient data

New developments in collecting standardised osteopathy patient data

2 January 2011

Full report published on developing and first piloting of standardised data collection tool for use by osteopaths.

A full report is published today on the development and first piloting in practice of a standardised data collection (SDC) tool for general use by osteopaths.

Very little is known currently of the national day-to-day practice of osteopaths, the profile of patients who consult osteopaths or the outcomes of their care. Led by the National Council for Osteopathic Research (NCOR), work began in February 2008 on a GOsC-funded project to develop, and pilot at national level, an SDC tool that would enable osteopaths to collect, share and compare patient data.

The SDC tool was developed by volunteer osteopaths working through the national network of NCOR research hubs, set up primarily for this purpose. The volunteers examined an existing SDC tool, widely used in physiotherapy, for its potential application to osteopathic practice. The osteopaths involved preferred to develop a specific tool for osteopathy to reflect the range of osteopathic practice.

The tool underwent a three stage testing process for validity and reliability. Practising osteopaths were invited to participate in a national pilot of the tool between April and July 2009.

The practice data collected via the pilot exercise could represent a first step to developing a comprehensive profile of UK osteopathic practice. The data collected offers a useful “snapshot” of current practice. However, it must be understood that the participating osteopaths were a volunteer sample, and the data collection process will need to be repeated with a systematic sample of the profession involved to confirm the findings of the project. The use of a validated and nationally recognised outcome measure, which is patient completed, will be required for use when the study is repeated.

The project has met its initial objectives of producing a data collection tool suitable for use in osteopathic practice in a variety of formats. NCOR is already leading further work on this and has invited osteopathic stakeholder groups to exchange views on the implementation of the SDC tool for national use and strategies for collecting data that support the work of the various stakeholder groups (including the GOsC, the British Osteopathic Association and the Osteopathic Educational Institutions.)