Hospital for Special Surgery Study: Expediting Hip Surgery Decreases Mortality, Increases Savings

A new economic study published in The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery outlines two cost-effective strategies for hospitals to expedite surgery for patients with hip fractures and possibly improve patient outcomes.

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Previously conducted studies show that the one-year mortality rate for hip fracture patients increases significantly if the time from hospital admission to surgery exceeds 48 hours.

In the first case from the Hospital for Special Surgery, researchers found that speeding up the preoperative evaluation to ensure necessary diagnostic tests and medical evaluations can be conducted at any hour. This strategy had a cost-effectiveness ratio of $2,318 per quality-adjusted life year and a cost-saving if 93 percent or more patients underwent expedited surgery.

The second strategy added an on-call team available to perform surgery outside of regular hours. It had an incremental cost-effectiveness ration of $43,153 per QALY.

Read the release about expediting surgery for patients with hip fractures.

Related Articles on Hip Surgery:

Dr. Lawrence Dorr: 6 Points Making the Case for Robotics in Hip Surgery

Metal Staples Can Lead to Great Infection Risk After Orthopedic Hip Surgery

Study: 90.4% of Hip Surgery Patients Return to Work Post-Surgery

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