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Fragility fracture is easily associated with a clinical worsening of patients in terms of quality of life and disability in the medium and long term. Following this traumatic event, more than half of the patients are unable to recover pre-fracture motor skills such as the ability to walk. The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on this type of patient has not been described and it is easy to hypothesize that, given their intrinsic frailty condition, they may have been significantly affected by changes in care pathways.
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The global health emergency due to the spread of COVID-19 has caused unprecedented pressure on the health systems of the various countries involved. COVID-19 has had a direct impact on the health status of people with an extremely high number of ICU admissions and deaths, but it has also led to a series of equally strong indirect consequences as described in various fields by multiple authors. In order to cope with the great health demand linked to the epidemic, hospitals had to invest human and physical resources, subtracting them from other care activities: operating theaters, surgical and non-surgical departments and the related staff normally destined for patient care were redirected and relocated to the care of COVID patients.
In the field of orthopedic surgery in the first phase of the spread of the epidemic, all non-essential interventions have been postponed and for essential interventions specific paths have been created at hospitals capable of operating even during the pandemic. This organization has led to a reduction in the overall number of hospitalized patients but the number of old patients operated for hip fracture has not decreased. From the point of view of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on all patients operated for hip fracture with respect to the care outcomes during the postoperative hospital stay, the available data are lacking.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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