Musculoskeletal Conditions

Dave Robertson Excerpts
Tuesday 17th December 2024

(1 day, 12 hours ago)

Westminster Hall
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Sonia Kumar Portrait Sonia Kumar
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I agree with the hon. Gentleman. I have worked in paediatrics where many patients get diagnosed late and suffer with late onset. That affects their whole life from the beginning, including their ability to get involved with physical activity and to build relationships, or their mental health and sleeping patterns. Getting an early diagnosis is one of the solutions I want to put forward. I would like the Minister to consider involving physiotherapists from early on, at nursery stage, to find out why we are not picking up MSK conditions from a really young age so that we can provide health and wellbeing from day one.

Dave Robertson Portrait Dave Robertson (Lichfield) (Lab)
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I hear my hon. Friend’s point about early intervention and making sure that we diagnose MSK conditions as soon as possible. A member of my extended family suffers from pregnancy-related osteoporosis, which needs to be picked up as soon as possible so that appropriate treatment can be put in place and mothers supported through it. A new charity has been set up specifically for pregnancy-associated osteoporosis, and it is pushing for the #MeasureThatMum campaign to make sure that midwives are trained to pick up the condition at that point, as early as is physically possible. Does my hon. Friend support that?

Sonia Kumar Portrait Sonia Kumar
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Of course. One of the things MSK physiotherapists look at is spinal fractures, 70% of which happen in the thoracic spine, generally in older women who have had poor bone health. It is essential to look after bone health from a really early age, while women are in their 40s, so that when they are older, in their 50s, 60s, 70s and 80s, they are on the right medication and doing bone health exercises to help for the future. For MSK conditions and osteoporosis, physiotherapists are essential. Spinal fractures are very often undiagnosed, and those who suffer spinal fractures as they get older are more likely then to have a hip fracture, after which the mortality rate becomes really high. My hon. Friend makes a very good point.

Let me explain why MSK physiotherapists and MSK care are so important. By 2035, two thirds of the population are expected to have two or more long-term conditions, which include MSK conditions. Versus Arthritis reports:

“Arthritis and related musculoskeletal conditions affect 20.3 million people in the UK.”

That means that one in six people has arthritis, which is a staggering amount. MSK conditions cost the NHS £5 billion a year, accounting for one in five GP appointments, 1.6 million hospital admissions and 30 million prescriptions a year. People with low confidence who feel that they cannot manage their conditions are more likely to attend hospital, while those who are most confident with long-term conditions have 38% fewer hospital admissions.

That is what we can do for the economy, but this issue is also about first-contact practitioners, as I mentioned at the beginning. With first-contact practitioners, we can save so many GP appointments. It is part of the long-term plan, which has been created to improve the impact on GP care and allied health professions that work in general practice. Working adults with MSK conditions are twice as likely to be economically inactive compared with those with long-term conditions. Of the people who are economically inactive due to ill health, 21% report having MSK conditions. It is about not just health but the economy and the wellbeing of the society that we are hopefully building together now that we are in government.

It is really important that we look at this issue in a holistic way. MSK conditions affect not just affect somebody’s mental health but their relationships and how they build them. They affect whether they can get into bed and sleep well, as well as their sleep hygiene. Perhaps a person eats poorly because they cannot get out, so they put on lots of weight. A person’s emotions, self-esteem and ability to work can be affected. I do not believe there is a silver bullet or that if we manage MSK conditions it will just fix one part. It has to be effective in respect of all the facets of somebody’s general wellbeing. We cannot tackle waiting lists and return people to work without that, and we need a strong workforce to plough back into the economy. It is incredibly important for people to understand that it is about holistic management and how we can improve health literacy and self-efficacy for people with MSK conditions.

I came to this debate to talk about solutions, as I am a solution-led person. We need to recognise the allied health professions in the NHS and build a workforce for MSK physios. That includes not just MSK physios but paramedics, podiatrists and every single person in the 14 allied health professions, all of which help to build resilience in the NHS, reduce waiting lists and build a healthier society.

MSK assessments need to happen from day one in nursery. We cannot expect paediatrics or care to be delivered well if we wait until the future, look back and say, “We should have done a better job when that person was younger.” If we looked at MSK conditions from day one—early in a child’s development and in their early years of support—there would not be a massive impact on society later in that person’s life because of having to do delayed diagnosis with multiple appointments and to look after their general wellbeing.

We also need to embed into society notions of what good health looks like from day one. That includes keeping active, going to classes and going to rehabilitation. We need a bigger awareness campaign about what being well looks like. It should not just be that the person leaves school and that is it; it needs to be lifelong. In the same way that people do continuous professional development, they should learn what looking after their body entails, and that should be translated into health policy.

We also need to increase the scope of physiotherapists’ practice. At the moment, they do not do DEXA scans, but they look at bone health in every other way. We look at X-rays, and work in fracture clinics, rehabilitation and trauma orthopaedics, but we do not look at the full picture of bone health. Will the Minister consider inputting that in future?

We need to increase the roll-out of community appointment days. We must provide same-day services for patients, including assessments, advice, health promotion and rehabilitation, and the community and volunteer sectors should provide support in a non-medicalised environment. If somebody has shoulder, knee or back pain, there should be a one-stop shop where they can be assessed appropriately, and they can then move on and get the right care at the right time.

We also need to put community care services on high streets and in places of worship. There are people who are not getting access, and there are massive health inequalities, so how do we promote care and health in difficult-to-reach communities? I would love to see care being put into places of worship and other locations people do not normally think of. I very much welcome the fact that the Government are already moving away from hospital care.

We also need to increase the number of first-contact practitioner places. A consultation with an FCP physio is £30 cheaper than the traditional GP-led pathway. MSK issues are one of the most common reasons to visit GPs, accounting for about 20% to 30% of appointments. Will the Minister meet me to discuss more of the solutions that I think need to be put forward to manage MSK issues? Would he be happy to visit my constituency to look at our fracture liaison service? I hope we will continue to fund that and that the service will be rolled out nationally.