Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery (May 2024)

Opportunities to optimise care and choice in joint replacement surgery using a digitally delivered, holistic PreHab pathway

  • Eleanor R Bills,
  • Anastasia Dimopoulos,
  • Anne LJ Burke,
  • Kathryn L Collins,
  • Ecushla C Linedale,
  • Vicki Hume,
  • Jackie Yeoh,
  • Sharyn Coles,
  • Mandy Nolan,
  • Kate Southam,
  • Lesley Thomas,
  • Melanie Ramsey,
  • Jane M Andrews

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/10225536241234032
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32

Abstract

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Purpose To describe the implementation and evaluation of a hospital-initiated, community-based, digital prehabilitation program ( My PreHab Program : MPP ) for adults referred for elective joint replacement. Methods MPP was implemented July 2022 and comprises a personalised digital health screen that guides the provision of self-management resources. Adults ( > 18 years) referred and accepted, or already waitlisted, for total knee/hip replacement surgery were eligible. Individuals requiring category 1 (urgent) or emergency surgery and those without a mobile phone were excluded. Implementation and intervention outcome measures (program adoption, equity of reach, fidelity, acceptability, appropriateness, feasibility, engagement, preliminary surgical outcomes) were explored via study-specific measures and hospital records. Results Of those invited ( N = 689), 77.8% participated. Participants and non-participants were similar in key demographic variables except regional invitees were more likely to participate than metropolitan (88.0% vs 75.4%, p = .002) and non-participants tended to be older (median age = 69.0 vs 64.0, p = .005). Participants reported on average four modifiable risk factors: most commonly chronic pain (79.1%), obesity (57.3%), and frailty (40.9%). Most participants (80.4%) reviewed all resources provided and reported action/intention to address issues identified (90.9%). Participants perceived MPP as acceptable (3.2/5), appropriate (3.3/5), and feasible (3.4/5). Early trends for participants progressing to surgery ( n = 33) show a reduced length of stay (MPP = 4.3, baseline = 5.3 days). Conclusion MPP demonstrated high adoption, fidelity, and participant engagement. It is acceptable, appropriate and feasible and has the potential to be scaled-up digitally at low-cost. Modifiable risk factors were prevalent and early indications suggest this preoperative intervention may benefit both patients and the healthcare system.