Open Access
Patient evaluation of early discharge after hip arthroplasty: development of a measure and comparison of three centres with differing durations of stay
Author(s) -
Peter Salmon,
Gillian R. Hunt,
B. V. S. Murthy,
Seamus O’Brien,
David Beverland,
Martin C. Lynch,
George M. Hall
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
clinical rehabilitation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.15
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1477-0873
pISSN - 0269-2155
DOI - 10.1177/0269215513481686
Subject(s) - medicine , arthroplasty , intensive care unit , rehabilitation , hip arthroplasty , cohort , odds ratio , quality of life (healthcare) , physical therapy , hospital discharge , surgery , emergency medicine , nursing
Objective: We compared patients’ evaluation of care between a surgical unit with a rapid discharge policy and two comparison units to test the hypothesis that the centre with rapid discharge has outcomes that are not inferior to those of the comparison sites.Design: Cross-sectional cohort study.Subjects: Consecutive consenting patients undergoing primary hip arthroplasty during 12 months in: a unit that had reduced postoperative stay to median three days; a specialised orthopaedic surgery treatment centre with median stay of five days; a traditional unit with median stay of six days ( N = 316, 125, 119, respectively).Methods: Six weeks postoperatively, patients completed a specially developed questionnaire measuring their evaluation of care and recovery, together with measures of function and quality of life for validation purposes.Results: Factor analysis of questionnaire responses identified two independent components of patients’ evaluation: problems in staff care and problems in physical recovery. Neither component was impaired in the unit with rapid discharge: similar proportions of patients reported recovery problems in each site (odds radios (ORs) for the two comparators versus unit with rapid discharge: 0.96, 1.18); and more patients reported care problems in the two comparator sites (ORs 2.97, 2.16).Conclusion: Duration of stay after primary hip arthroplasty can be reduced to three days without intensive pre- or postoperative care, without detriment to patient evaluation.