Prescribing in Physiotherapy for Pain

Prescribing in Physiotherapy for Pain: A Current and Emerging Role[edit | edit source]

Aim[edit | edit source]

With changing demographics, higher expectations and an increase in long term conditions (Department of Health, 2012) there is an heightened pressure and demand on the NHS. To meet these demands the roles within the NHS have had to change and expand.


As recently as 2013, physiotherapists in England have been granted the right to independently prescribe, giving them the ability to prescribe drugs, including some controlled drugs. These prescriptions must be used “within the overarching framework of human movement, performance and function” (NHS England Publications, 2013)

With these new responsibilities that are becoming a part of a physiotherapist’s remit, this page looks to explore prescribing as a physiotherapist. It also looks to provide information around their scope and responsibilities for prescribing for pain that impacts specialist musculoskeletal physiotherapist’s areas of expertise.


Audience: The resource was produced for use by Band 5 physiotherapists to understand the role the profession plays in prescribing medicines. It may be of benefit to other health professionals seeking knowledge. A case study and questions will be included, which can be used to check understanding after each section


Abbreviations[edit | edit source]

Abbreviations.jpg

Learning Outcomes[edit | edit source]

LO1. – The learner will able to complete the case study questions to demonstrate an understanding of prescribing within physiotherapy.

LO2. – the learner will be able to distinguish the scope of practice for non-prescribers, supplementary prescribers and independent prescribers within physiotherapy.

LO3. - The learner will be able to comprehend the process of how to become an independent and supplementary prescriber.

LO4. – The learner will be able to describe the effects & side effects of common groups of pain medication, and the role they have to play in patient centred care. Also, they should be able to provide general advice at a band 5 level for pain.

LO5. - The learner will be able to evaluate the effect of prescribing on the current and future role of physiotherapists.

Key Definitions[edit | edit source]

  • Pain - The ISAP define pain as “An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage.” http://www.iasp-pain.org/Taxonomy#Pain
  • Extended Scope Practitioner - A clinician who applies and expands their expert knowledge and skills to areas of healthcare traditionally performed by another healthcare profession, which is currently seen as outside the scope of practice of the majority of their profession (Crane and Delany 2013).
  • Drug Classes - A drug is put into a class based on the penalty it would have if there was any offence involving the drug. 
  • Non-prescribers - Physiotherapists without further training within the prescribing field, newly qualified Band 5’s fit within this areas.
  • Supplementary prescriber- Those who have had some further training and have an agreed working relationship with a doctor or a dentist to implement treatment plans, any prescriptions that are written by this group must be signed off by the medical practitioner.
  • Independent prescribers - Without consultation are able to either from their own diagnosis or a previous diagnosis prescribe treatment including prescribing and are fully responsible and accountable for the treatment. This should be done within the physiotherapists area of expertise.
  • Non-Medical Prescriber - Any healthcare professional other than doctors or dentists who can independently prescribe medicine to a patient this includes physiotherapists nurses, podiatrists, pharmacists, chiropodists and optometrists.

Background[edit | edit source]

In 2013 in England and in 2014 for the rest of the UK, physiotherapists were given the right to train to prescribe independently. Below shows a timeline of Key dates:


 

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As the healthcare needs of the British population change, the NHS must also change and adapt to meet them. For example, the British public are living longer and acquiring more long term conditions as a result. These are estimated to occupy 50% of the GP appointments and 70% of hospital beds. Another issue is that there is also thought to be an increase in the expectations of patients who want a co-ordinated, accessible 7-day service from the NHS. It has also been felt in literature that patients may find their healthcare experience disjointed and repetitive, due to a lack of integration between healthcare professionals (Morris 2002). Each of these puts extra pressure on a resource strapped service, with costs currently thought to be around £12.3 billion per year (Donaldson, 2008). To meet these challenges new approaches and changing roles are being implemented (NHS England 2013) .

Due to this setting of increasing demand and reducing resources, a supported decision was made to grant physiotherapists prescribing powers. Some of the many highlighted benefits of this for the patient include;

  • Making a patient’s prescribing experience an easier, quicker and more streamlined pathway within a single appointment, reducing a patient’s total number of appointments within the NHS (NHS England Publications, 2013)
  • Increasing involvement and independent management of a patient’s entire healthcare journey, as a result of the increasing use of physiotherapists as first-contact practitioners (Chartered Society of Physiotherapy 2013)
  • Reducing demand on finite medical resources by preventing delays and contributing to a flexible team (DHSSPS, 2013)
  • Utilising the skills of the non-medical professions expertise in their specialist area to provide patient centred care.

This was summed up by Phil Gray, chief executive of the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy, upon physiotherapists being awarded the right to independently prescribe said that:

"This is a landmark moment that will lead to patients receiving faster, more effective treatment for their condition” (BBC 2013).

Of the 94 physiotherapists who have taken this professional leap forward, six interviewed by the magazine Frontline indicated that they felt the greatest benefit of their prescribing power was the ability to streamline patient care. They felt that it allowed them to begin treating patients immediately, without having to send them back to their GP for sufficient pain relief, and allowed them to view the bigger picture of a patient’s care (Hunt 2015).


Whilst this resource looks to educate on the drugs used by physiotherapists for pain, physiotherapists are also using the independent prescribing power to help prescribe for other conditions such as spasticity management (Ashford et al 2014)


[edit | edit source]

Prescribing may appear a strange addition to a physiotherapist’s toolkit and outside the remit of the profession, which are defined by the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy (2013) as anything within the 4 pillars of practice. These are:

  1. Massage
  2. Exercise and movement
  3. Electrotherapy
  4. Kindred methods of treatment

Any physiotherapist must not only work within their own personal scope of practice, but also within the scope of the profession (Chartered Society of Physiotherapy 2013).

? Do you think prescribing is within the scope of physiotherapy?

In a narrative review, Crane and Delany (2013) comment that physiotherapists demonstrate an excellent ability to clinically reason and adapt to the changing needs of the societies they serve. The UK government has been convinced that prescribing is within physiotherapy’s scope because physiotherapists already possess the core skills that it requires.

The National Prescribing Centre has produced a framework that applies to all prescribers, no matter what profession they come from. Below is a comparison of this framework it to the HCPC’s Standards of Proficiency for physiotherapists:

NPC vs HCPC framework