Understanding MSK in Healthcare

MSK—short for musculoskeletal—covers bones, joints, muscles, and connective tissues, and plays a crucial role in healthcare practice. We’ll review what MSK means in healthcare, common MSK disorders, tools used for triage and assessment, and how patients can take an active role through validated questionnaires. The goal: give you a clear, actionable overview of MSK and its impact in healthcare systems.
What Does “MSK” Mean in Healthcare?
“Musculoskeletal (MSK) health” refers to the well-being and function of the body’s structural system: bones, muscles, joints, ligaments, and tendons. Healthcare professionals use the term MSK to broadly address conditions that involve the aforementioned MSK structures. Understanding MSK is foundational to managing musculoskeletal issues, which represent one of the top drivers of disability worldwide—affecting an estimated 1.71 billion people worldwide.
Common MSK Disorders & Why They Matter
Across healthcare settings, professionals encounter common MSK disorders like osteoarthritis, low back pain, joint pain, and muscle strains and sprains. According to several studies, back and neck pain alone are the leading causes of disability globally—about 30% of primary care visits are for MSK complaints, and 9.4% of total medical expenses in the US are for MSK—highlighting the need for efficient screening, early diagnosis, thoughtful use of conservative care, and appropriate referrals.
MSK Triage & Practitioner Tools
Healthcare providers use structured triage to determine urgency—and sometimes risk—based on symptoms, red flags, and comorbid conditions. Innovations, including direct care programs and enhanced triage workflows, help differentiate between inflammatory disorders (like rheumatoid arthritis) and mechanical complaints (like muscle strains or ligament sprains), potentially reducing inappropriate referrals while improving patient outcomes and lowering costs.
Assessing MSK Health with PROMIS
Accurately tracking MSK outcomes requires standardized, validated measures. One of the most widely used systems is PROMIS—the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System—developed by the NIH to measure physical, mental, and social health across conditions.
PROMIS tools help clinicians evaluate key domains relevant to MSK care, including:
• Physical Function (e.g., mobility, upper extremity use)
• Pain Interference (how pain affects daily life)
• Fatigue and Sleep Disturbance
• Emotional Distress (e.g., anxiety, depression)
These measures are flexible and can be delivered via short forms or computer-adaptive testing (CAT), which tailors questions to the individual in real time for more efficient, precise scoring.
In clinical MSK settings, PROMIS has been shown to outperform legacy tools like the SF-36 and KOOS in responsiveness, ease of use, and integration into electronic systems. It’s now a go-to for practices aiming to monitor patient progress, guide treatment, and demonstrate outcomes to payers or partners.
Conclusion
MSK in healthcare encompasses a broad and critically important field—from definitions and disorders, through triage pathways and assessment tools—all supporting better patient outcomes. If you’re looking to implement or improve MSK services, understanding this landscape—and the tools that support it, like a digital front door or outcomes reporting—is key. Second Door is here to help you make the most of your MSK program needs, whether you’re a rehab therapy provider, employer, or benefits professional—contact us to get started.