Which Clinical and Patient Factors Influence the National Economic Burden of Hospital Readmissions After Total Joint Arthroplasty?

Jan 22, 2017Clinical orthopaedics and related research

Clinical and Patient Factors Linked to the National Cost of Hospital Readmissions After Joint Replacement Surgery

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Abstract

The national rates of 90-day readmissions after total hip arthroplasty (THA) and total knee arthroplasty (TKA) are 8% and 7%, respectively.

  • Approximately 62,493 out of 719,394 total joint arthroplasties resulted in 90-day readmissions.
  • Key factors influencing the cost of 90-day THA readmissions include length of stay, severity of diagnosis, type of readmission, hospital ownership, and patient age.
  • For TKA readmissions, the most significant cost factors are length of stay, severity of diagnosis, gender, hospital procedure volume, and hospital ownership.
  • Private insurance reimbursed 90-day readmission costs for THA and TKA at rates approximately USD 1324 and USD 1372 higher than Medicare, respectively.
  • Procedure-related complications account for 59% of total THA readmission costs, while 49% of TKA readmission costs are associated with similar complications.

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