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Sept. 20, 2019

Changing the narrative: Progress and challenges of improving osteoarthris (OA) care

The 2019 Cy Frank Lecturer makes recommendations on how OA care needs to change

鈥淚n rich countries, health care costs are rising faster than economic growth. We need to eliminate low-value interventions and practices,鈥 said Dr. Stefan Lohmander, MD, PhD, at the recent Cy Frank Legacy Lecture in Calgary.

Lohmander, an orthopaedic surgeon from Lund University, Sweden, and a world leader in using patient reported outcomes to evaluate care, delivered his lecture to an audience in Calgary, before traveling to Edmonton, Ottawa and London ON for similar presentations.

Swimming upstream

Lohmander鈥檚 provocative talk focused on how OA care needs to change.

Stressing the importance of exercise as an effective OA drug, Lohmander raised concerns about prescribing opioids for pain relief in OA patients.  鈥淭he evidence shows that NSAIDS (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, such as ibuprofen) and opioids offer similar pain relief in OA. Why, then, are doctors prescribing opioids for OA? This has to stop.鈥

Lohmander also discussed the overuse of arthroscopic surgery for knee pain in middle-aged and older patients. 鈥淭here are a series of studies that show that lifestyle modifications and exercise are as effective as arthroscopic surgery in the management of the painful knee in middle aged patients,鈥 said Lohmander. 鈥淕iven this, why would we prescribe surgery, which is costly and carries some risk. This is low value care.鈥

鈥淭rying to get this message out is swimming upstream. There is obviously some resistance to these changes,鈥 said Lohmander.  鈥淲e need to change the message, change the treatment focus and put the patient in charge. It鈥檚 not about decreasing OA, it鈥檚 about decreasing the burden of OA.鈥