Lord Shinkwin debates involving the Department of Health and Social Care during the 2024 Parliament

Fracture Liaison Services

Lord Shinkwin Excerpts
Wednesday 4th December 2024

(2 weeks, 5 days ago)

Lords Chamber
Read Full debate Read Hansard Text Watch Debate Read Debate Ministerial Extracts
Lord Shinkwin Portrait Lord Shinkwin (Con)
- View Speech - Hansard - -

My Lords, earlier on today, I googled the meaning of the phrase, “It’s a no brainer”. Apparently, it applies to a question that is very easy to answer and, although it did not give an example, I suspect we could all think of one. As my noble friend Lord Black of Brentwood said, there is unanimity across your Lordships’ House on this.

As someone who lives with a bone condition, I am something of a reluctant expert on fractures, or at least on the excruciating pain they cause. The crunch as the bone fractures is immediately followed by the weird sensation of there being a void, because suddenly the broken bone cannot bear any weight. There is literally nothing there, and into that vacuum comes this all-consuming shockwave of pain. I make this point because some may assume that rollout is not urgent because, as my noble friend Lord Black of Brentwood mentioned with regard to hip fractures, it is not normally life-threatening. But this ignores the unnecessary human, as well as financial, cost.

I think of Stephen Robinson, a forklift truck operator, who suffered chronic, agonising back pain, dismissed for years as muscular by his GP. The doctor insisted that he should leave his manual job if he wanted his pain to improve. Eventually, the choice was taken away because the pain was so severe that Mr Robinson had to leave work altogether at 61. He remembers “living in the chair, drugged up to the eyeballs, counting the minutes until I could take the next painkiller”. My Lords, I have been there. It is not nice. A private DEXA scan is not easy to afford when you are unemployed, but it showed that Mr Robinson had 10 undiagnosed spinal fractures. An early assessment through a fracture liaison service would have given him back years of his life and saved him so much unnecessary pain.

In contrast, Alison Smith retired at 60, feeling fit, healthy and ready to embrace her new-found freedom. But nine months later a fall left her with fractured ribs and an alarming sense that something was wrong. Seen quickly by medics, she was referred to a fracture liaison service, which identified severe osteoporosis and started her on treatment. With the support of the fracture liaison service team, Alison received lifestyle advice and ongoing care, which prevented any further fractures happening and saved the NHS and the taxpayer money.

In conclusion, any further delay in the rollout of these vital services would represent an inexplicable, unjustifiable false economy, because it is actually costing money not to proceed with universal provision. I look forward to the noble Baroness the Minister giving us reason to hope.