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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 2 - 2
1 Jan 2011
Sheeraz A Timperley A Matten P
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The demand for primary hip replacements has grown steadily over the past 20 years and continues to do so. The challenge is to deliver a high quality and cost-effective service by developing short-stay pathways to optimise patient care and outcome.

A four-day hip protocol was established, with attention to detail on analgesia, thrombo-prophylaxis, mobilisation and patient motivation. A multi-disciplinary team was trained to deliver the pathway on a designated ward for primary hip replacements with the aim to discharge patients on the third post-operative day (four day stay in total). Before the initiation of this audit our average stay for primary hips was nine days. The national average stay is 10.6 days, with the top 10 trusts averaging 6.7 days.

In the initial three-month trial, 66 hip replacements (39 females and 27 males) done by the hip team at Princess Elizabeth Orthopaedic Centre in Exeter were audited against the four-day hip protocol. Average age was 72.4 years (range 44 – 92 years). Two patients were discharged on the second post-operative day and another 15 patients on the third post-operative day. As a result, we managed to get 25.8% of the patients home within four days. Overall, the average length of stay was only 6.3 days.

In conclusion, while we only achieved our target in 25.8% of patients, the project improved our overall length of stay remarkably. It is clearly evident that a targeted pathway focused to patient care in all aspects using a multi-disciplinary approach can improve the overall service delivery.