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Adult Shoulder Pain

Diagnosis/Definition

Shoulder pain, with or without symptoms of instability, stiffness, weakness, catching, crepitus, deformity, or paresthesias, not associated with acute fracture, in the absence of cervical spine or non-skeletal etiologies (such as cardiac or neurogenic).

Initial Diagnosis and Management
Ongoing Management and Objectives
Indications for Specialty Care Referral

Abnormal x-ray and exam suggestive of tumor, infection, fracture, residual dislocation, or congenital deformity.

No response to treatment within 4 weeks.

Incomplete response to treatment within 3 months with initial slow improvement.

Physical therapy as required for maintenance of ROM, strength, and for instruction in a self-therapy program. PT is authorized to consult specialty care if deterioration occurs.

Criteria for Return to Primary Care

Resolution of symptoms, with or without surgical treatment.

Completed specialty care evaluation demonstrating problem not amenable to surgical treatment but requiring ongoing care that may be accomplished at primary care level with the following guidelines recommended by the specialist in the health care record:

Goals of further treatment, including pain relief, ROM, functional limitations, and anticipated long term course.

Indications for specialty care reengagement such as deterioration or exacerbation requiring management or Rx exceeding ongoing management objectives guidelines outlined above.

Chronic condition that can be managed at the primary care level with intermittent specialty care evaluation as needed.