Author: SGDoctor Editorial Team
Medical review (where applicable): Dr Terence Tan, Singapore-licensed medical doctor, The Pain Relief Clinic, Singapore
Short Answer
If you have back pain in Singapore, the “right” provider depends less on job title and more on the likely nature of the problem.
Some patients improve with conservative rehabilitation and time. Others need medical assessment to exclude more serious causes, review medication options, consider investigations, or determine whether specialist referral is appropriate.
A GP, orthopaedic surgeon, and physiotherapist each play different roles. Understanding what each typically does can help you make a more practical first decision.
Who This Guide Is For
This guide may be useful if you:
- woke up with new lower back pain
- have persistent back pain that keeps returning
- are unsure whether physiotherapy is enough
- are wondering if you need a specialist
- have pain shooting down the leg
- want a practical Singapore-focused comparison
Back Pain: Why Provider Choice Feels Confusing
Back pain is common.
But “back pain” is not a diagnosis.
It can represent many different clinical situations.
Examples include:
- simple mechanical strain
- disc-related pain
- sciatica
- spinal stenosis
- facet-related pain
- muscle overload
- referred hip pain
- degenerative spine changes
- inflammatory spinal disease
- compression fracture
- infection (uncommon but important)
- non-musculoskeletal causes
This is why choosing the right provider can feel unclear.
The question is not:
“Who is best?”
The better question is:
“Who is the most appropriate starting point for my symptoms?”
What Does A GP Typically Do?
A general practitioner (GP) is often the most accessible medical first contact.
Typical roles may include:
- symptom assessment
- medical history review
- physical examination
- medication discussion
- identifying red flags
- issuing medical leave where appropriate
- deciding whether imaging is needed
- referring onward when necessary
GPs are often practical first-line providers for uncomplicated back pain.
Examples:
- acute muscular strain
- mild-to-moderate non-traumatic back pain
- first episodes without red flags
- short-term symptom control
That said, the exact scope and musculoskeletal focus may vary between practitioners.
What Does An Orthopaedic Surgeon Typically Do?
Orthopaedic surgeons manage musculoskeletal conditions, including surgical and non-surgical pathways.
In back pain contexts, their role may include:
- structural spine assessment
- specialist imaging interpretation
- procedural discussion
- surgical decision-making
- advanced referral planning
However:
not every back pain patient needs orthopaedic review.
Many back pain episodes improve without surgery.
The NICE guideline for low back pain and sciatica supports conservative first-line management in many non-emergency cases.
That distinction matters.
What Does A Physiotherapist Typically Do?
Physiotherapists focus on:
- rehabilitation
- movement assessment
- exercise prescription
- posture education
- walking retraining
- endurance conditioning
- mobility restoration
- return-to-function planning
They often play an important role in conservative care.
Examples:
- mechanical back pain
- movement-related pain
- deconditioning
- recurrent strain patterns
- post-acute rehabilitation
For many patients, physiotherapy is a major part of recovery.
But rehabilitation is not always the first step.
Comparison Table
| Factor | GP | Orthopaedic Surgeon | Physiotherapist |
|---|---|---|---|
| First medical assessment | Yes | Yes | No |
| Medication prescribing | Yes | Yes | No |
| Medical red flag screening | Yes | Yes | Limited non-medical scope |
| Imaging decisions | Yes | Yes | Limited/direct pathway dependent |
| Surgical planning | No | Yes | No |
| Rehabilitation | Limited | Limited | Yes |
| Exercise prescription | Limited | Limited | Yes |
| Functional retraining | Limited | Limited | Yes |
| Emergency escalation | Yes | Yes | Limited |
This is about role differences—not superiority.
When A GP May Be A Practical First Step
A GP-first approach may make sense when:
- symptoms are new
- pain appears uncomplicated
- symptoms are mild to moderate
- medication advice is needed
- you need initial triage
- you are unsure whether escalation is necessary
Example:
Someone develops acute lower back pain after lifting luggage.
No trauma.
No leg weakness.
No fever.
No bowel/bladder symptoms.
GP review may be practical.
When Physiotherapy May Be A Good Starting Point
A physiotherapy-first approach may be reasonable when:
- diagnosis is reasonably clear
- symptoms are mechanical
- rehabilitation is clearly needed
- there are no red flags
- movement retraining is the likely priority
Examples:
- recurrent posture-related back pain
- deconditioning
- muscular overload
- reduced mobility
- return-to-activity recovery
The challenge:
not all patients know whether the diagnosis is actually clear.
When Orthopaedic Review May Be Relevant
Orthopaedic review may be more relevant when:
- structural concerns are suspected
- surgery is being considered
- severe neurological symptoms are present
- persistent symptoms fail conservative care
- specialist structural decision-making is needed
Examples:
- significant nerve compression concerns
- progressive weakness
- structural instability concerns
- advanced degenerative cases
- unresolved persistent symptoms
But referral timing varies by clinical context.
When Back Pain Needs Medical Assessment Earlier
Some situations should not default straight to exercise.
Examples include:
1. Severe Sciatica Symptoms
Pain radiating down the leg may reflect nerve irritation.
Possible causes include:
- disc-related nerve compression
- spinal stenosis
- inflammatory irritation
Not all sciatica is urgent.
But worsening neurological symptoms deserve medical review.
2. Progressive Weakness
Examples:
- foot drop
- worsening leg weakness
- loss of function
These warrant prompt medical assessment.
3. Red Flag Symptoms
Examples:
- unexplained fever
- trauma
- cancer history
- unexplained weight loss
- bowel/bladder dysfunction
- night pain
- severe constant pain
These do not automatically mean serious disease.
But they should not be ignored.
4. Pain That Keeps Returning
Recurring back pain may reflect:
- incomplete rehab
- poor conditioning
- unrealistic recovery expectations
- structural issues
- recurrent loading problems
- unrecognised contributing factors
Repeated symptom recurrence may justify reassessment.
What About MRI?
A common patient question:
“Should I just get an MRI?”
Not always.
MRI can be useful.
But not every patient needs advanced imaging.
Evidence from clinical guidance suggests imaging is generally reserved for situations where findings may influence management, red flags exist, or symptoms persist despite appropriate conservative management.
MRI findings also require clinical interpretation.
Why Imaging Can Be Misleading
Many spinal imaging findings become more common with age.
Degenerative disc changes do not always explain symptoms.
This is well recognised in spine medicine.
The issue is not whether imaging is useful.
The issue is whether imaging answers the right question.
According to a widely cited systematic review in The Lancet, degenerative spinal imaging findings can be present even in asymptomatic individuals.
That is why scans should be interpreted carefully.
What If Physiotherapy Didn’t Help?
This does not automatically mean physiotherapy failed.
Possible explanations:
- wrong diagnosis
- insufficient duration
- poor exercise adherence
- incorrect exercise selection
- load mismatch
- structural pathology
- non-mechanical pain contributors
According to Dr Terence Tan, persistent pain sometimes reflects a need to reassess diagnostic assumptions rather than simply repeating the same recovery strategy.
Practical Decision Framework
GP First If:
- new back pain
- medication discussion needed
- unclear severity
- no obvious rehab diagnosis
- initial medical triage desired
Physiotherapist First If:
- clear mechanical issue
- no red flags
- rehab clearly appropriate
- movement dysfunction likely
Orthopaedic Review If:
- surgery discussion needed
- persistent severe symptoms
- progressive neurological signs
- structural concerns
FAQ
Should I skip the GP and go straight to physiotherapy?
Sometimes.
If the issue appears clearly mechanical.
But uncertainty changes that calculation.
Is an orthopaedic surgeon always the best option for back pain?
No.
Many back pain episodes improve without surgical involvement.
Does sciatica always need MRI?
No.
Some cases improve conservatively.
Imaging decisions depend on context.
Can physiotherapy worsen back pain?
Exercise can temporarily aggravate symptoms in some cases.
That does not necessarily mean harm.
But persistent worsening deserves reassessment.
When is back pain urgent?
Potentially when associated with:
- severe weakness
- bowel/bladder changes
- major trauma
- fever
- concerning red flags
Urgency depends on specifics.
Evidence Context
NICE Low Back Pain and Sciatica Guidance supports conservative management in many non-emergency low back pain presentations.
Brinjikji et al., The Lancet demonstrated that spinal degenerative imaging findings can exist in asymptomatic individuals, reinforcing cautious interpretation.
Key Takeaways
- provider choice depends on symptom pattern
- GPs, orthopaedic surgeons, and physiotherapists serve different roles
- not all back pain needs specialist review
- not all back pain should start with exercise
- imaging can help—but only in context
- persistent or neurologically concerning symptoms deserve escalation
About The Contributor
This article was prepared by the SGDoctor editorial team.
Medical review or general clinical perspective may include input from Dr Terence Tan, Singapore-licensed medical doctor, The Pain Relief Clinic, Singapore.
Editorial & Medical Information Disclaimer
This article was prepared by the SGDoctor editorial team for general healthcare education in Singapore.
Medical review or commentary, where included, reflects general clinical perspectives contributed by Dr Terence Tan, a Singapore-licensed medical doctor.
This content is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute personalised medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations.
Healthcare decisions should be made based on individual clinical assessment, symptoms, examination findings, and where appropriate, diagnostic investigations.
Treatment suitability, costs, insurance eligibility, Medisave usage, and availability of services may vary between providers and patients.
Clinical guidance evolves over time. Readers should verify important healthcare decisions with appropriately qualified healthcare professionals.
This article does not guarantee outcomes or recommend any specific treatment pathway for every patient.
