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    • Objective
    • Methods
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Comparing Cost & Utilization of Provider Types for Back and Neck Pain

Published
Authors
Affiliations

Forest Kim

Baylor University

David Kahle

Baylor University

Neil Fleming

Baylor University

Michael Gallaugher

Baylor University

Tanner Houston

Harvard Business School

Sonish Lamsal

Baylor University

Rodney Sturdivant

Baylor University

Published

September 11, 2025

Abstract

Objective

The purpose of this study was to compare treatment expenditures and utilization of licensed doctors of chiropractic or doctors of physical therapy working for Airrosti (AP) compared with non-AP providers (NAP) comprising 5 different provider types.

Methods

This study was a retrospective, claims-based, cross-sectional study using 5 years of claims and enrollment data from the state of Texas. We compared licensed doctors of chiropractic or doctors of physical therapy working for Airrosti to NAP. Episodes of care for back and neck pain were formed using 90-day clean periods. We utilized propensity scores using inverse probability weighting to control for selection bias. We examined the association of provider type with total costs per episode and 5 different measures of utilization: numbers of visits, length of episode, hospitalization, use of advanced diagnostic imaging, and use of surgery.

Results

Included were 645 799 unique patient episodes of care. Orthopedic specialists, physiatrists, and physical therapists had higher costs and utilization than AP, except for lower visits for orthopedic specialists. Primary care providers had lower costs and utilization than AP, except for hospitalizations, in which no difference was found. AP were most similar to chiropractors in terms of costs and utilization; however, AP had higher use of advanced diagnostic imaging compared with chiropractors. Chiropractors had more visits and longer episodes than AP. Standard deviations for average episode cost, episode length, and number of visits were greater for all provider types compared with AP, except for primary care providers.

Conclusion

In the sample studied, providers using standardized treatment pathways had reduced variation and costs for patients with spinal pain. We hypothesize that adherence to treatment pathways that align with recommended clinical practice guidelines that discourage the use of diagnostic imaging and surgery as a first step for treating lower back and neck pain may have resulted in the significant cost and utilization differences found between AP and NAP.

Citation

BibTeX citation:
@article{kim2025,
  author = {Kim, Forest and Kahle, David and Fleming, Neil and
    Gallaugher, Michael and Houston, Tanner and Lamsal, Sonish and
    Sturdivant, Rodney},
  publisher = {Elsevier},
  title = {Comparing {Cost} \& {Utilization} of {Provider} {Types} for
    {Back} and {Neck} {Pain}},
  journal = {Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics},
  volume = {Online},
  date = {2025-09-11},
  langid = {en}
}
For attribution, please cite this work as:
Kim, Forest, David Kahle, Neil Fleming, Michael Gallaugher, Tanner Houston, Sonish Lamsal, and Rodney Sturdivant. 2025. “Comparing Cost & Utilization of Provider Types for Back and Neck Pain.” Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics Online (September).