International Orthopaedics June 2013, Volume 37, Issue 6, pp 1157–1163

Integrated care pathways in lower-limb arthroplasty: are they effective in reducing length of hospital stay?

Mertes, S.C., Raut, S. & Khanduja, V.
Hip Knee

Purpose

The aim of this study was to examine the effect of an integrated care pathway (ICP) for total hip and knee arthroplasty (THA/TKA) on length of stay (LOS), day of surgery admission rate (DOSA) and postoperative length of stay (POLOS).

Methods

Three hundred and eight THAs and 299 TKAs were assessed in a retrospective before–after trial design. LOS, POLOS and DOSA were recorded for patients before and after introduction of the ICP. The ICP encompassed a patient education programme, specific daily management goals, variance mapping, daily facilitated meetings and a DOSA policy. Subgroup analysis according to age and gender was also performed.

Results

Mean LOS was significantly reduced by 1.4 (from 6.9 to 5.5) days for THA and 0.8 (from 6.4 to 5.6) days for TKA. Elderly patients and men achieved greater LOS reductions than their counterparts for both operations. Younger patients undergoing THA achieved a significantly higher DOSA rate than older patients (89 % vs 71 %, p = 0.010); however, this difference was not observed in the TKA population. Mean POLOS for THA was reduced by 0.6 (from 5.9 to 5.3) days, again with the greatest benefit seen in elderly and male patients. POLOS for TKA patients was not significantly affected by the ICP.

Conclusions

The introduction of an ICP reduced LOS by 1.4 days for THA and 0.8 days for TKA. Elderly and male patients benefitted most.


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