Goods, Services and Values Program, Pacific Northwest Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Portland, Oregon, USA
Goods, Services and Values Program, Pacific Northwest Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Portland, Oregon, USA.
BMJ Open. 2019 Sep 20;9(9):e029522. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-029522.
Determine whether patients who live in greener and more walkable neighbourhoods live longer, and take fewer opioids, following hip or knee arthroplasty.
Retrospective cohort study.
Residential environment following surgery at one of 54 New Zealand hospitals.
All people who received a total hip or knee arthroplasty at a publicly-funded hospital in New Zealand in 2006 and 2007 (7449 hip arthroplasties and 6558 knee arthroplasties).
Time to all-cause mortality and number of postsurgical opioid prescriptions.
Patients who lived in greener neighbourhoods, as measured by the Normalised Difference Vegetation Index, lived longer following hip or knee arthroplasty (standardised OR: 0.95, 95% CI 0.92 to 0.99). However, when we estimated separate hip-arthroplasty-only and knee-arthroplasty-only models, greenness was only significantly associated with greater longevity following hip arthroplasty. Similarly, patients who lived in greener neighbourhoods took fewer opioids in the 12 months following hip or knee arthroplasty (standardised OR: 0.97, 95% CI 0.95 to 0.99), but in separate hip-arthroplasty-only and knee-arthroplasty-only models, greenness was only significantly associated with lower opioid use following hip arthroplasty. Walkability was not significantly associated with postsurgical opioid use or postsurgical longevity. All ORs were adjusted for sex, ethnicity, age, presurgical chronic health conditions, presurgical opioid use, social deprivation and length of hospital stay.
Consistent with the literature on enhanced-recovery programme, people who lived in greener neighbourhoods took fewer opioids, and lived longer, following hip arthroplasty. Improving access to the natural environment may therefore be an effective component of postsurgical recovery programme.
确定在髋或膝关节置换术后居住在绿化和步行环境更好的社区的患者是否寿命更长,使用的阿片类药物更少。
回顾性队列研究。
在新西兰 54 家医院中的一家手术后的居住环境。
2006 年和 2007 年在新西兰一家公立医院接受全髋关节或膝关节置换术的所有人(7449 例髋关节置换术和 6558 例膝关节置换术)。
全因死亡率的时间和手术后阿片类药物处方的数量。
绿化程度(用归一化差异植被指数衡量)较高的患者在髋关节或膝关节置换术后寿命更长(标准化比值:0.95,95%置信区间 0.92 至 0.99)。然而,当我们估计单独的髋关节置换术和膝关节置换术模型时,绿化程度仅与髋关节置换术后的更高生存率显著相关。同样,绿化程度较高的患者在髋关节或膝关节置换术后 12 个月内使用的阿片类药物较少(标准化比值:0.97,95%置信区间 0.95 至 0.99),但在单独的髋关节置换术和膝关节置换术模型中,绿化程度仅与髋关节置换术后的阿片类药物使用减少显著相关。步行环境与术后阿片类药物使用或术后寿命无显著相关性。所有比值比均经过性别、种族、年龄、术前慢性健康状况、术前阿片类药物使用、社会剥夺和住院时间调整。
与强化康复计划的文献一致,居住在绿化程度较高的社区的人在髋关节置换术后使用的阿片类药物较少,寿命更长。因此,改善对自然环境的接触可能是术后康复计划的有效组成部分。