The Journal of Arthroplasty, Volume 33, Issue 6, 1647 - 1648

Outpatient-Focused Joint Arthroplasty Is the Future: The Midwest Center for Joint Replacement Experience

Berend, Michael E. et al.
Hip Knee

Background

Perhaps, the most significant developments in joint arthroplasty in the past decade have been in the area of multimodal perioperative management reducing pain, nausea, and length of stay leading to outpatient arthroplasty.

Methods

Over a 2-year period, we performed 1230 arthroplasty cases including partial knee, total hip, total knee, and selected revision cases.

Results

Patient satisfaction ranged from 98% to 100% great/good. Ninety-eight percent of patients were discharged the same day. There were no readmissions for pain control and an overall readmission rate of 2%.

Conclusion

The outpatient program centers on the patient needs, family engagement, essentials of home recovery, preoperative education, efficient surgery, and a surgeon-controlled environment with a highly standardized care. This is a distinct shift in today’s health-care environment, which has seen the expansion of regulatory demands; focus on Electronic Health Record, and distractions from real discussions of demonstrated value creation. The future is bright for both ambulatory surgery center and hospital development of successful outpatient joint arthroplasty program for patients and surgeons alike.


Link to article