Social risk and patient‐reported outcomes after total knee replacement: Implications for Medicare policy

Author:

Danielson Elizabeth C.1ORCID,Li Wenjun2,Suleiman Linda3,Franklin Patricia D.13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Social Sciences Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine Chicago Illinois USA

2. Department of Public Health, Center for Health Statistics and Biostatistics Core, Health Statistics and Geography Lab University of Massachusetts Lowell Massachusetts USA

3. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine Chicago Illinois USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo determine whether county‐level or patient‐level social risk factors are associated with patient‐reported outcomes after total knee replacement when added to the comprehensive joint replacement risk‐adjustment model.Data Sources and Study SettingPatient and outcomes data from the Function and Outcomes Research for Comparative Effectiveness in Total Joint Replacement cohort were merged with the Social Vulnerability Index from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Study DesignThis prospective longitudinal cohort measured the change in patient‐reported pain and physical function from baseline to 12 months after surgery. The cohort included a nationally diverse sample of adult patients who received elective unilateral knee replacement between 2012 and 2015.Data Collection/Extraction MethodsUsing a national network of over 230 surgeons in 28 states, the cohort study enrolled patients from diverse settings and collected one‐year outcomes after the surgery. Patients <65 years of age or who did not report outcomes were excluded.Principal FindingsAfter adjusting for clinical and demographic factors, we found patient‐reported race, education, and income were associated with patient‐reported pain or functional scores. Pain improvement was negatively associated with Black race (CI = −8.71, −3.02) and positively associated with higher annual incomes (≥$45,00) (CI = 0.07, 2.33). Functional improvement was also negatively associated with Black race (CI = −5.81, −0.35). Patients with higher educational attainment (CI = −2.35, −0.06) reported significantly less functional improvement while patients in households with three adults reported greater improvement (CI = 0.11, 4.57). We did not observe any associations between county‐level social vulnerability and change in pain or function.ConclusionsWe found patient‐level social factors were associated with patient‐reported outcomes after total knee replacement, but county‐level social vulnerability was not. Our findings suggest patient‐level social factors warrant further investigation to promote health equity in patient‐reported outcomes after total knee replacement.

Funder

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Health Policy

Reference46 articles.

1. HCUPnet ‐ Hospital Inpatient National Statistics. AHRQ 2022. Accessed March 6 2023.https://hcupnet.ahrq.gov/#query

2. The Cost of Joint Replacement

3. Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement Mode. CMS. Accessed April 9 2022 2022.https://innovation.cms.gov/innovation-models/cjr

4. County Health Rankings

5. Association of the Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement Model With Disparities in the Use of Total Hip and Total Knee Replacement

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