Litcius/Paper detail

The Elephant in the Room: Too Much Medicine in Musculoskeletal Practice

Jeremy Lewis, Chad Cook, Tammy Hoffmann, Peter O’Sullivan

2020Journal of Orthopaedic and Sports Physical Therapy65 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

While advances in assessment and management of musculoskeletal conditions have improved care for many people, there have been other, less beneficial developments in the provision of care for people with musculoskeletal pain conditions, one of which is the worrying tendency to provide too much medicine. Too much medicine occurs when the provision of either investigation or intervention (or both) is unjustifiably excessive. Another concern in musculoskeletal health care is medicalizing normality—when a normal human function or condition is labeled as abnormal. In this Viewpoint, the authors argue that medicalizing normality creates health concerns where none exist, while too much medicine involves provision of care where benefits do not outweigh harms, and wastes precious health care resources. The authors (1) list 2 common examples of too much medicine, and 2 examples of medicalizing normality, relevant to physical therapy practice; (2) outline the drivers of too much medicine and medicalizing normality; and (3) make suggestions for change. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther 2020;50(1):1–4. doi:10.2519/jospt.2020.0601

Topics & Concepts

NormalityMedicineHealth careIntervention (counseling)Alternative medicineFamily medicinePhysical therapyNursingPsychiatryLawPathologyPolitical scienceHealthcare cost, quality, practicesHealth Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of LifeMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation