Burn Edward, Edwards Christopher J, Murray David W, Silman Alan, Cooper Cyrus, Arden Nigel K, Pinedo-Villanueva Rafael, Prieto-Alhambra Daniel
Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
NIHR Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Facility, University Hospital Southampton, Southampton, UK.
BMJ Open. 2018 Jan 27;8(1):e019146. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-019146.
To measure changes in length of stay following total knee and hip replacement (TKR and THR) between 1997 and 2014 and estimate the impact on hospital reimbursement, all else being equal. Further, to assess the degree to which observed trends can be explained by improved efficiency or changes in patient profiles.
Cross-sectional study using routinely collected data.
National Health Service primary care records from 1995 to 2014 in the Clinical Practice Research Datalink were linked to hospital inpatient data from 1997 to 2014 in Hospital Episode Statistics Admitted Patient Care.
Study participants had a diagnosis of osteoarthritis or rheumatoid arthritis.
Primary TKR, primary THR, revision TKR and revision THR.
Length of stay and hospital reimbursement.
10 260 primary TKR, 10 961 primary THR, 505 revision TKR and 633 revision THR were included. Expected length of stay fell from 16.0 days (95% CI 14.9 to 17.2) in 1997 to 5.4 (5.2 to 5.6) in 2014 for primary TKR and from 14.4 (13.7 to 15.0) to 5.6 (5.4 to 5.8) for primary THR, leading to savings of £1537 and £1412, respectively. Length of stay fell from 29.8 (17.5 to 50.5) to 11.0 (8.3 to 14.6) for revision TKR and from 18.3 (11.6 to 28.9) to 12.5 (9.3 to 16.8) for revision THR, but no significant reduction in reimbursement was estimated. The estimated effect of year of surgery remained similar when patient characteristics were included.
Length of stay for joint replacement fell substantially from 1997 to 2014. These reductions have translated into substantial savings. While patient characteristics affect length of stay and reimbursement, patient profiles have remained broadly stable over time. The observed reductions appear to be mostly explained by improved efficiency.
测量1997年至2014年间全膝关节置换术(TKR)和全髋关节置换术(THR)后住院时间的变化,并在其他条件均相同的情况下估算对医院报销的影响。此外,评估观察到的趋势在多大程度上可由效率提高或患者特征变化来解释。
使用常规收集数据的横断面研究。
将临床实践研究数据链中1995年至2014年的国民健康服务初级保健记录与医院事件统计住院患者护理中1997年至2014年的医院住院数据相链接。
研究参与者被诊断患有骨关节炎或类风湿关节炎。
初次TKR、初次THR、翻修TKR和翻修THR。
住院时间和医院报销。
纳入了10260例初次TKR、10961例初次THR、505例翻修TKR和633例翻修THR。初次TKR的预期住院时间从1997年的16.0天(95%CI 14.9至17.2)降至2014年的5.4天(5.2至5.6),初次THR的预期住院时间从14.4天(13.7至15.0)降至5.6天(5.4至5.8),分别节省了1537英镑和1412英镑。翻修TKR的住院时间从29.8天(17.5至50.5)降至11.0天(8.3至14.6),翻修THR的住院时间从18.3天(11.6至28.9)降至12.5天(9.3至16.8),但估计报销费用没有显著减少。纳入患者特征后,手术年份的估计影响仍然相似。
1997年至2014年间关节置换的住院时间大幅下降。这些减少转化为了大量节省。虽然患者特征会影响住院时间和报销,但患者特征随时间大致保持稳定。观察到的减少似乎主要由效率提高来解释。