Unnecessary care in orthopaedic surgery

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q3 SURGERY ANZ Journal of Surgery Pub Date : 2024-07-25 DOI:10.1111/ans.19171
Alex B. Boyle MBChB, MPH, Ian A. Harris MBBS, MMed, MSc, PhD, FRACS, FAHMS
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Abstract

Unnecessary care, where the potential for harm exceeds the potential for benefit, is widespread in medical care. Orthopaedic surgery is no exception. This has significant implications for patient safety and health care expenditure. This narrative review explores unnecessary care in orthopaedic surgery. There is wide geographic variation in orthopaedic surgical practice that cannot be explained by differences in local patient populations. Furthermore, many orthopaedic interventions lack adequate low-bias evidence to support their use. Quantifying the size of the problem is difficult, but the economic burden and morbidity associated with unnecessary care is likely to be significant. An evidence gap, evidence-practice gap, cognitive biases, and health system factors all contribute to unnecessary care in orthopaedic surgery. Unnecessary care is harming patients and incurring high costs. Solutions include increasing awareness of the problem, aligning financial incentives to high value care and away from low value care, and demanding low bias evidence where none exists.

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骨科手术中不必要的护理。
不必要的护理,即潜在的伤害超过潜在的益处,在医疗护理中普遍存在。骨科手术也不例外。这对患者安全和医疗开支都有重大影响。这篇叙述性综述探讨了骨科手术中的不必要治疗。骨科手术实践中存在很大的地域差异,这并不能用当地患者人群的差异来解释。此外,许多骨科干预措施缺乏足够的低偏倚证据来支持其使用。对问题的规模进行量化是困难的,但与不必要的治疗相关的经济负担和发病率可能是巨大的。证据差距、证据-实践差距、认知偏差和医疗系统因素都是造成骨科手术中不必要护理的原因。不必要的护理对患者造成了伤害,并产生了高昂的费用。解决方法包括提高对这一问题的认识、调整经济激励机制以促进高价值护理而非低价值护理,以及在不存在低偏差证据的情况下要求提供低偏差证据。
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来源期刊
ANZ Journal of Surgery
ANZ Journal of Surgery 医学-外科
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
11.80%
发文量
720
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: ANZ Journal of Surgery is published by Wiley on behalf of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons to provide a medium for the publication of peer-reviewed original contributions related to clinical practice and/or research in all fields of surgery and related disciplines. It also provides a programme of continuing education for surgeons. All articles are peer-reviewed by at least two researchers expert in the field of the submitted paper.
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