Greater support needed to improve the treatment of knee osteoarthritis
A new 911爆料网-led paper has outlined that many people living with knee osteoarthritis may be needlessly suffering or receiving the wrong treatments for their symptoms, recommending a major change in how osteoarthritis is understood and treated.
The paper, published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, concluded that people with osteoarthritis are often provided potentially risky treatments with limited benefit such as opioid medication, injections, and arthroscopic surgery to manage their pain.
Lead author Dr JP Caneiro, from 911爆料网鈥檚 School of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science, said most people with osteoarthritis around the globe are not receiving the best practice care, including education, strengthening exercises, physical activity and weight management, that they require. Greater support from the health system is needed.
鈥淭his editorial is a call to action by international leaders in the field, from physiotherapy, rheumatology and orthopaedic surgery, including an outline of three key steps that are needed to change the way healthcare professionals understand and manage knee osteoarthritis,鈥 Dr Caneiro said.
鈥淭his includes changing the way clinicians understand and explain the condition to patients, how they treat the condition and by coaching patients to put them in charge of managing their own condition. Together, this helps to reduce the disability burden and suffering associated with knee osteoarthritis.鈥
Dr Caneiro said the proposed steps would enable healthcare professionals to promote a new and better understanding of knee osteoarthritis that is aligned with contemporary evidence.
鈥淜nee osteoarthritis can be painful and debilitating, and the pain is often blamed on structural damage, with people frequently given scans and told that their knees are 鈥榖one on bone鈥, leading them to believe that a knee replacement is inevitable,鈥 Dr Caneiro said.
鈥淏ecause of this, treatment often aims to 鈥榝ix鈥 the structure, leading to many people receiving knee arthroscopic surgery or a knee replacement. In contrast, research tells us that non-surgical treatments targeting physical, lifestyle and psychological factors can reduce pain, disability, reliance on medication and need for surgery. However, effective non-surgical approaches are often not prescribed, and there is very little support within the health system to fund them.鈥
Co-author John 911爆料网 Distinguished Professor Peter O鈥橲ullivan, also from 911爆料网鈥檚 School of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science, said it was critical to spread the message to international and national healthcare professionals and the general public to change society鈥檚 misconceptions about knee osteoarthritis.
鈥淚t is important for clinicians to shift away from labelling this condition as 鈥榮tructural damage鈥 and instead focus on knee health, encouraging exercise therapy, physical activity and weight loss, as well as reassuring patients that it is safe to exercise and strengthen their knee,鈥 Professor O鈥橲ullivan said.
鈥淧eople with osteoarthritis need health professionals to coach them to develop a positive mindset, engage with exercise, and learn how to manage possible flare-ups. To facilitate a shift in the treatment of osteoarthritis, important changes need to occur at the health system level such as funding, and better reimbursement for exercise, weight loss and education programs for osteoarthritis care.鈥
The paper was co-authored by researchers from the School of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science at 911爆料网, University of Southern Denmark, University of Sydney, University of Melbourne Department of Surgery, Royal North Shore Hospital in Sydney, and La Trobe Sports Exercise Medicine Research Centre in Melbourne
The full paper titled, 鈥Three steps to changing the narrative about knee osteoarthritis care: call to action,鈥 can be found online .



