The management of elderly patients with femoral fractures - A randomised controlled trial of early intervention versus standard care


Autoria(s): Swanson, CE; Day, GA; Yelland, CE; Broome, JR; Massey, L; Richardson, HR; Dimitri, K; Marsh, A
Data(s)

01/01/1998

Resumo

Objective: To determine the effect of an early intervention program in an acute care setting on the length of stay in hospital of elderly patients with proximal femoral fractures. Setting: Acute orthopaedic ward of a large teaching hospital. Design and Participants: A randomised controlled trial comparing 38 intervention patients with 33 Standard Care patients. Intervention: Early surgery, minimal narcotic analgesia, intense daily therapy and close monitoring of patient needs via a multidisciplinary approach versus routine hospital management. Main outcome measures: Length of stay (LOS); deaths; level of independent functioning. Results: Mean LOS was shorter in the Intervention group than in the Standard Care group (21 days v. 32.5 days; P<0.01). After adjusting for other factors that could affect LOS (e.g. age, sex, pre-trauma functional levels, pre-trauma comorbidity and postsurgical complications), the Intervention program was significantly predictive of shorter LOS (P=0.01). The Intervention group did not experience greater numbers of deaths, deterioration in function or need for social support than the Standard Care group. Conclusion: This early intervention program in an acute care setting results in significantly shorter length of hospital stay for elderly patients with femoral fractures.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:35207

Idioma(s)

eng

Palavras-Chave #Medicine, General & Internal #Geriatric Rehabilitative Care #Proximal Femur #Clinical-trial #Hip
Tipo

Journal Article