Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Arthroplastic hip surgery "fast-track" the subject of increasing interest and reduces the average length of stay and improve patient satisfaction. This fast circuit implemented in many schools uses dedicated inpatient units, preoperative patient education in multidisciplinary groups (including physiotherapists, nurses, rehabilitation doctors and surgeons), an analgesia protocol multimodal and a network dedicated to the outlet (1.2).
The investigators working hypothesis is that the mere realization of a preoperative visit a week before the intervention would reduce the average length of stay for all patients with a target of two nights (instead of 7.5 days currently) (3) to reduce the use of SSR during hospitalization. This consultation would serve to explain to the patient the early course of care, give advice and help to anticipate acts for its release "post-operative" as, for example, contact a physical therapist and a nurse or check to their community pharmacy if their heparin stock is enough and to answer any questions (Appendix 2: early information given to the patient consultation J-8).
The investigators protocol is inspired by the one already in place for outpatient PTH and PTH 1 night but invariably apply to all patients for whom a home is considered output.
Full description
Objectives
Primary Objective Influence of preoperative consultation to "D-8" on the average length of stay of a randomized series multi-operator.
Secondary objectives
Evaluation of patient satisfaction and clinical status 2. Evaluation of the analgesic consumption 3. Evaluation of complications
Population concerned
Inclusion Criteria All patients undergoing total hip replacement
Exclusion criteria
Patient choosing immediately a supported SSR in postoperative 2. Geographical remoteness 3. Social isolation 4. Medical pathology requiring special monitoring (phlebitis history, coagulation disorders, anticoagulant therapy ...) 5. psychiatric pathology 6. Patients opting for the protocol "overnight"
Methodology and duration of the research This will be a prospective mono-centric multi-operator on the assessment of the management of patients in the surgical practice referred to above.
The inclusion of patients will take place over a period of 12 months, the goal is to include 90 patients (Figure 1).
Justification of Sample Size In 2013, for patients operated in a planned way, and with degenerative osteoarthritis, the length of stay was 7.5 days with a standard deviation of 3 days.
With such a length of stay, a staff of 2 to 45 subjects will detect a difference in length of stay of at least 1.8 days (significance level of 5%, 80% power). Such a difference is reasonably possible with the proposed organizational intervention.
Early preoperative consultation will be proposed to the randomized patient. When the patient is included in the group studied, it will be presented during the preoperative consultation early an information document with advice and guidance for patients to anticipate acts provided for its release "post-operative" (cf. . Appendix 2: patient information delivered early consultation J-8). This consultation will educate patients about what will happen when they leave, specifying concretely how their articulation with the city and the various professionals involved will have been planned and respond to all the issues raised.
Data collection Clinical data will be collected anonymously by an internal orthopedic surgery service for all patients included in the study by the realization of the Oxford hip score before the intervention (J-1), an assessment of pain through verbal validated scale (VAS), of St Joseph satisfaction questionnaire (validated questionnaire Saphora) accompanied by a verbal scale patient discharge and a telephone call 30 days after surgery to achieve again the Oxford hip score, evaluation of pain by VAS and patient satisfaction by simple verbal scale (see Annex 1) (4).
The criteria for hospital discharge are:
The assessment criteria will be used:
Primary endpoint:
Criterion of secondary judgments:
randomization: Randomization in the 2 groups (usual care without consultation with J-8 versus consultation with J-8) will be carried by the patient. The patient list will be balanced by randomly alternating blocks. orthopedic service personnel will not be notified in advance of schedule to avoid a bias in the management of patients with the service.
Data processing :
For each subject will be awarded an identifier (original name and surname - year of birth) and the data will be entered on a computer file which will be sent to the statistician in charge of analyzing the GHPSJ site. There will be no exchange of personal data.
Statistical analysis :
To find and test differences, univariate analyzes will use the test t-Student for continuous variables and the chi of 2 for categorical variables or their nonparametric equivalents. The significance level was set at p <0.05. If imbalance groups, a multivariate model is developed
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
0 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal