The Guardian Australia

First NHS physiother­apy clinic run by AI to start this year

- Sarah Marsh

The first NHS AI-run physiother­apy clinic is to be rolled out this year in an effort to cut waiting times amid growing demand and staff shortages.

The new platform will provide same-day automated video appointmen­ts with a digital physiother­apist via an app that responds to informatio­n provided by a patient in real time.

It is the first platform of its kind to be approved by the health regulator, the Care Quality Commission, as a registered healthcare provider.

Patients seeking physiother­apy for issues such as back pain can be referred to the platform Flok Health through a community or primary care healthcare setting, such as their GP. They can also self-refer directly into the service.

The service aims to provide faster care and reduce waiting times and pressure on clinicians, those behind it say.

Waiting lists for treatment for - musculoske­letal (MSK) problems such as back, neck, and knee pain have grown by 27% since January last year. According to the NHS website, more than 30m working days are lost to MSK conditions every year in the UK, and they account for up to 30% of GP consultati­ons in England.

However, some in the industry say that AI cannot yet replicate the skill of a fully trained physiother­apist, and that treatment needs to be nuanced due to the complexity of cases.

The Chartered Society of Physiother­apy (CSP) said the number of physiother­apy posts in the NHS was not keeping pace with demand from Britain’s ageing and increasing­ly obese population.

CSP health informatic­s lead, Euan McComiskie, said of the AI clinic:

“There is no doubt that more needs to be done to tackle huge NHS waiting lists, particular­ly for musculoske­letal services and AI has huge potential to be an adjunct to the work of physiother­apists. However, AI cannot yet replicate the clinical judgment and skills of a physiother­apist, who is required to be registered with a statutory regulator, the Health and Care Profession­s Council (HCPC).”

McComiskie added that physiother­apists manage “increasing complexity in patient presentati­on and their treatment needs to be individual­ly tailored”. He said: “It is early days to know how much AI can eventually provide clinical decision making and more research is needed … but not at the cost of patient access, safety, experience nor trust.”

Those behind the Flok app, cofounded by the medic and former profession­al rower Finn Stevenson, say initial trial results show its effectiven­ess. As part of a series of threemonth pilot studies between May and December 2023, more than 1000 NHS staff suffering from back pain selfreferr­ed to an AI physiother­apist for treatment.

All of those surveyed patients from the NHS pilot said their experience with Flok had been at least equivalent to seeing a human physiother­apist, and 57% of patients said they thought the AI experience was better.

Stevenson said: “Our technology means every patient gets a con

stantly individual­ised experience and care pathway based on their feedback, symptoms and progress. It’s like having a structured video call with a physiother­apist, but our side of the call is being assembled on servers.”

He added that it was “getting harder” for patients to access physiother­apy, “leaving them in pain and often unable to continue their daily routines”.

Participan­ts in each of the organisati­ons involved in the pilot – NHS Lothian, NHS Borders, Cambridge University hospitals, and Royal Papworth hospital NHS foundation trust – could selfrefer themselves to the AI service.

An initial video assessment with an AI physiother­apist was performed to evaluate their symptoms. Once approved for treatment, patients had weekly video appointmen­ts. The digital physiother­apist prescribed exercises and pain management techniques, monitored symptoms and adjusted patients’ treatments.

More than four in five participan­ts reported that their symptoms had improved during treatment with the platform. Ninety seven per cent of the patients who self-referred to Flok within NHS Lothian received an automated triage outcome; 92% were immediatel­y approved for AI physio and given access to an appointmen­t that same day; 5% were automatica­lly referred to another NHS service such as a GP.

Data from the trial at Cambridge University hospitals indicated that the digital clinic had helped reduce wait times for physiother­apy. Waiting lists for in-person musculoske­letal appointmen­ts increased by more than 50% once the pilot had ended.

Flok is the first and only digital MSK provider to be approved by the CQC, the app founder said. This means that rather than being a technology supplier licensing software to NHS trusts, Flok can directly treat and manage patients on behalf of their trusts. The CQC assesses regulated services at initial registrati­on and then inspects at variable intervals to ensure that all quality and governance requiremen­ts are met.

Flok is also the first technology to be granted medical device clearance under MHRA regulation­s for fully automating the triage, assessment and treatment of back pain.

The system provides autonomous assessment and triage as opposed to diagnosis. Flok uses an automated process to determine whether a patient can instantly have access to physiother­apy appointmen­ts or is triaged to another service such as NHS 111 or their GP. Flok has not received any reports of missed red flags from the trials, they said. Stevenson said: “The autonomous triage process is subjected to rigorous continuous testing.”

The AI clinic is scheduled to launch with its first NHS partners this summer, although no specific dates could be provided.

 ?? Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA ?? According to the NHS website, more than 30m working days are lost to musculoske­letal conditions every year.
Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA According to the NHS website, more than 30m working days are lost to musculoske­letal conditions every year.

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