PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Significant variations in hip fracture health costs and care between NHS hospitals and regions, study finds

Significant variations in hip fracture health costs and care between NHS hospitals and regions, study finds
2023-07-11
(Press-News.org) There are significant variations in healthcare spending and care delivery across NHS hospitals in England and Wales following hip fracture, a new study aimed at understanding how hospital care impacts patients’ outcomes and costs has revealed.

The study, led by the University of Bristol and funded by Versus Arthritis, highlights the urgent need for evidence-based quality improvement strategies to reduce healthcare spending and improve patient outcomes in the year following a hip fracture.  The research is published online in The Lancet Healthy Longevity today [10 July].

Hip fracture is a serious health concern, with more than 70,000 older adults admitted to a UK hospital each year. This study highlights the high healthcare burden associated with breaking a hip.

The research analysed data from national databases for 178,757 hip fracture patients aged 60 years and above in England and Wales, who broke their hip between 2016 and 2019, followed up to just before the pandemic. More than one in four patients died within a year of their hip fracture.

Patients spent an average of 32 days in hospital in the year following a hip fracture, resulting in substantial inpatient costs of on average £14,642 per patient – a cost similar to that incurred in the year after a stroke, and that exceeds costs of many common cancers. But this cost varied substantially between hospitals, with more than a two-fold difference in spending, ranging from £10,867 to £23,188 per patient, between NHS hospitals studied in England and Wales.

The researchers identified that in hospitals where patients are up and about quickly after their operation and where physiotherapy is provided seven days a week, patient costs were lower, the risk of sudden confusion (delirium) was reduced, and patients spent fewer days in hospital in the year following hip fracture.

The research further highlighted the crucial role of orthogeriatricians - consultant geriatricians who specialise in the care of people with fractures-  in hip fracture care.

Dr Petra Baji, Senior Research Associate in Health Economics at Bristol Medical School: Translational Health Sciences (THS) and the paper’s first author, explained: “The findings suggest that having all patients assessed by an orthogeriatrician within the first days of admission could cut healthcare spending by £529 per patient, as well as reduce the chance of dying by 15% in the year following hip fracture.”

Dr Rita Patel, Senior Research Associate in Medical Statistics at Bristol and statistician for the study, added: “If a consultant orthogeriatrician attends hospital clinical governance meetings, a further cost savings of £356 could potentially be achieved, as well as patients spending fewer days spent in the hospital in the year following hip fracture.”

The study highlights the importance of addressing the way hospitals deliver hip fracture care to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of hip fracture services, and the need to develop evidence-based quality improvement strategies across the UK, to achieve financial savings while also improving patient outcomes.

Celia Gregson, Professor in Clinical Epidemiology in the Musculoskeletal Research Unit at the University of Bristol and Chief Investigator of the study, commented, "The variation we have seen in patient outcomes and health spending following hip fracture are difficult to justify on purely clinical grounds, it tells us that the way we organise the delivery of care can be improved nationally.

“By prioritising orthogeriatrician assessment, getting patients out of bed promptly after surgery, providing seven-day physiotherapy, reducing delirium risk for patients, and holding monthly multidisciplinary clinical governance meetings, hospitals stand to improve patient outcomes and reduce their healthcare spending."

Caroline Aylott, Head of Research Delivery at Versus Arthritis, said: “This research shows the unacceptable state of care for older people who break their hip. The findings show that older people have a high chance of dying within a year of a hip fracture, and that quality of care varies hugely between NHS hospitals in England and Wales.

"As hip fractures mainly affect older people, many of whom live with multiple long-term conditions, this research suggests we are not getting older people's care right. That must change.

"The study found that better, faster access to orthogeriatricians and fracture liaison services would not only reduce people's risk of dying and improve chances of a better recovery, but also reduce NHS spending. Just weeks after publication of the NHS workforce plan, the study provides yet further evidence of the desperate and immediate need for a properly resourced NHS."

The research team has already developed a potential solution, after working with the Royal Osteoporosis Society to develop an innovative toolkit – REDUCE hip fracture service implementation toolkit – informed by the results of their research.

The toolkit is freely available to all healthcare professionals and service managers to support the quality improvement of fracture service provision within the 172 acute hospital settings across England and Wales.

This study follows previous work from the REDUCE study (REducing unwarranted variation in the Delivery of high-qUality hip fraCture services in England and Wales), published last year in Age and Ageing, the journal of the British Geriatrics Society, which focused on patient outcomes of hip fracture patients in the short term.

The study was funded by Versus Arthritis (ref: 22086), the UK's biggest charity supporting people with arthritis and musculoskeletal conditions, and supported by the National Institute for Health and Care Research Bristol Biomedical Research Centre (NIHR Bristol BRC).

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Significant variations in hip fracture health costs and care between NHS hospitals and regions, study finds

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Quantum proton billiards

Quantum proton billiards
2023-07-10
The quantum nature of interactions between elementary particles allows drawing non-trivial conclusions even from processes as simple as elastic scattering. The ATLAS experiment at the LHC accelerator reports the measurement of fundamental properties of strong interactions between protons at ultra-high energies.   The physics of billiard ball collisions is taught from early school years. In a good approximation, these collisions are elastic, where both momentum and energy are conserved. The scattering angle depends on how central the collision was (this is often quantified by the impact parameter value – the distance between the centres of ...

Unused renewable energy an option for powering NFT trade

2023-07-10
ITHACA, N.Y. -- Unused solar, wind, and hydroelectric power in the U.S. could support the exponential growth of transactions involving non-fungible tokens (NFTs), Cornell Engineering researchers have found. Fengqi You, the Roxanne E. and Michael J. Zak Professor in Energy Systems Engineering in Cornell Engineering, is corresponding author of “Climate Concerns and the Future of Non-Fungible Tokens: Leveraging Environmental Benefits of the Ethereum Merge,” which published July 10 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. You’s co-author is Apoorv Lal, ...

UC begins DOD-funded clinical trials with Amplicore

UC begins DOD-funded clinical trials with Amplicore
2023-07-10
With support from Amplicore, a University of Cincinnati spinoff biopharmaceutical company, researchers at UC have begun a Department of Defense-funded clinical trial that seeks a regenerative pharmaceutical solution for meniscal tears. Each year more than 500,000 people in the United States sustain acute tears in their meniscus, a piece of cartilage in the knee that cushions and stabilizes the joint. This rate is even higher in the military population, where such injuries can greatly impact the ability of servicemen and women to perform their duties.   The Phase 1/2 clinical trial enrolled its first patients in Cincinnati with Brian Grawe, ...

Stretchy color-changing display points to future of wearable screens

Stretchy color-changing display points to future of wearable screens
2023-07-10
Imagine a wearable patch that tracks your vital signs through changes in the colour display, or shipping labels that light up to indicate changes in temperature or sterility of food items. These are among the potential uses for a new flexible display created by UBC researchers and announced recently in ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces. “This device is capable of fast, realtime and reversible colour change,” says researcher Claire Preston, who developed the device as part of her master’s in ...

Next-generation flow battery design sets records

Next-generation flow battery design sets records
2023-07-10
RICHLAND, Wash.—A common food and medicine additive has shown it can boost the capacity and longevity of a next-generation flow battery design in a record-setting experiment. A research team from the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory reports that the flow battery, a design optimized for electrical grid energy storage, maintained its capacity to store and release energy for more than a year of continuous charge and discharge. The study, just published in the journal Joule, details the first use of a dissolved simple sugar called β-cyclodextrin, a derivative of ...

Making headway in precision therapeutics with novel fully organic bioelectronic device

Making headway in precision therapeutics with novel fully organic bioelectronic device
2023-07-10
New York, NY—July 10, 2023—As researchers make major advances in medical care, they are also discovering that the efficacy of these treatments can be enhanced by individualized approaches. Therefore, clinicians increasingly need methods that can both continuously monitor physiological signals and then personalize responsive delivery of therapeutics. Need for safe, flexible bioelectronic devices Implanted bioelectronic devices are playing a critical role in these treatments, but there are a number of challenges that have stalled their widespread adoption. These devices require specialized components for signal acquisition, processing, data transmission, and powering. ...

The American Journal of Health Economics presents a special cluster on the opioid crisis

2023-07-10
The August 2023 issue of the American Journal of Health Economics will feature a cluster of articles that examine the opioid crisis. These articles consider such topics as access to treatment for opioid use, the impact of the Affordable Care Act on opioid-related emergency department visits, and the effectiveness of prescription drug monitoring programs. In “Do Policies to Increase Access to Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder Work?” authors Leemore S. Dafny, Eric Barrette, and Karen Shen use longitudinal patient-level claims data to examine the impact of demand and supply-side policies on treatment rates among patients diagnosed with opioid ...

NJIT awarded $10 million for technical assistance at polluted brownfield sites through EPA grant

2023-07-10
New Jersey Institute of Technology has been awarded $10 million by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as part of a $315 million initiative from President Biden’s Investing in America Agenda to expedite the assessment and cleanup of brownfield sites across the country. The funding comes entirely from the historic $1.5 billion investment from Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.  Brownfields are abandoned or underutilized properties that may have hazardous substances, pollutants, or contaminants present, making their redevelopment complex. Under the EPA’s Technical Assistance to ...

Whale of a debate put to rest

Whale of a debate put to rest
2023-07-10
Researchers have finally settled a decades-long dispute about the evolutionary origins of the pygmy right whale.   The smallest of the living baleen whales, it’s tank-like skeleton is unique, and its ecology and behaviour remain virtually unknown.   Because it is so unusual, the evolutionary relationships of the pygmy right whale (Caperea marginata) have long been a bone of contention.   In a study that solves the debate, just published in Marine Mammal Science, an international group of researchers sequenced the complete genome of Caperea, combining ...

Acute kidney injury not associated with worsening kidney function in persons with CKD

2023-07-10
1. Acute kidney injury not associated with worsening kidney function in persons with CKD Findings suggest kidney disease observed after AKI often present before injury Abstract: https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/M22-3617 URL goes live when the embargo lifts A study of hospitalized persons with chronic kidney disease (CKD) fournd that acute kidney injury (AKI) did not predict worsening of kidney function trajectory once difference in pre-hospitalization characteristically were fully accounted for. Instead, the authors suggest that much of determinants of faster ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Females have a 31% higher associated risk of developing long COVID, UT Health San Antonio-led RECOVER study shows

Final synthetic yeast chromosome unlocks new era in biotechnology

AI-powered prediction model enhances blood transfusion decision-making in ICU patients

MD Anderson Research Highlights for January 22, 2025

Scholastica announces integration with Crossmark by Crossref to expand its research integrity support

Could brain aging be mom’s fault? The X chromosome factor

Subterranean ‘islands’: strongholds in a potentially less turbulent world

Complete recombination map of the human-genome, a major step in genetics

Fighting experience plays key role in brain chemical’s control of male aggression

Trends in preventive aspirin use by atherosclerotic cardiovascular risk

Sex differences in long COVID

Medically recommended vs nonmedical cannabis use among US adults

Spanish scientists discover how the gut modulates the development of inflammatory conditions

Compact comb lights the way for next-gen photonics

New research reveals how location influences how our immune system fights disease

AI in cell research: Moscot reveals cell dynamics in unprecedented detail

New study finds social programs could reduce the spread of HIV by 29%

SIDS discovery could ID babies at risk of sudden death

Ozone exposure linked to hypoxia and arterial stiffness

Princeton Chemistry develops copper-detection tool to discover possible chelation target for lung cancer

Drug candidate eliminates breast cancer tumors in mice in a single dose

WSU study shows travelers are dreaming forward, not looking back

Black immigrants attract white residents to neighborhoods

Hot or cold? How the brain deciphers thermal sensations

Green tea-based adhesive films show promise as a novel treatment for oral mucositis

Single-cell elemental analysis using Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS)

BioChatter: making large language models accessible for biomedical research

Grass surfaces drastically reduce drone noise making the way for soundless city skies

Extent of microfibre pollution from textiles to be explored at new research hub

Many Roads Lead to… the embryo

[Press-News.org] Significant variations in hip fracture health costs and care between NHS hospitals and regions, study finds