Researchers have found that Medicaid patients with low back pain (LBP) whose front-line treatment is provided by a physical therapist (PT) tend to generate lower costs over 1 year than patients who went to the emergency department or a physician first.

Primary care was found to be the most common entry point for the patients, with 70.8% of the population beginning their LBP care in a family medicine, internal medicine, urgent care, or obstetrics/gynecology setting. Emergency Departments were the second most-used entry point (17.6%) followed by physical medicine and rehabilitation (3.9%), and physical therapy (3.3%). “Other settings”—orthopedic or neurosurgeon, chiropractic, pain medicine, etc.—were selected by 4.4%.
Overall, the average cost for treatment of LBP over the 1-year study period was $626—less than the $900 average for patients who entered via the Emergency Department, but close to double the average costs associated with patients who went to a physical therapist first ($335).
Reprinted from PT InMotion News; Friday, September 04, 2015
- Sciatica or Piriformis Syndrome? 3 Ways to Tell the Difference (Self-Test Guide) - December 22, 2025
- What Is Gout? Why It Happens and What You Can Do About It - November 17, 2025
- 3 Essential Back-Saving Tips You MUST Know Before Any Workout - November 14, 2025








