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American journal of medical quality : the official journal of the American College of Medical Quality | Vol.28, Issue.4 | | Pages 335-8

American journal of medical quality : the official journal of the American College of Medical Quality

Reducing costly falls of total knee replacement patients.

Quanjun, Cui Laura H, Schapiro Matthew C, Kinney Peter, Simon Andrew, Poole Wendy M, Novicoff  
Abstract

The objective of this study was to determine whether the use of a knee immobilizer brace reduces patient falls associated with the recent use of femoral nerve blocks for pain control after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The authors conducted a retrospective study to investigate fall rates before and after the introduction of an immobilizer brace. The demographics of patients and total cost of care were examined. Of the 600 TKA patients who did not receive a knee immobilizer, 22 (3.7%) experienced a fall. In contrast, of the 502 patients who received knee immobilizers, only 8 patients (1.6%) fell. This difference achieves statistical significance (P = .04). Given the considerable costs associated with hospital falls and the significant reduction of these falls related to knee immobilizer use shown in this study, the authors recommend that knee immobilizers be given to TKA patients as standard practice.

Original Text (This is the original text for your reference.)

Reducing costly falls of total knee replacement patients.

The objective of this study was to determine whether the use of a knee immobilizer brace reduces patient falls associated with the recent use of femoral nerve blocks for pain control after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The authors conducted a retrospective study to investigate fall rates before and after the introduction of an immobilizer brace. The demographics of patients and total cost of care were examined. Of the 600 TKA patients who did not receive a knee immobilizer, 22 (3.7%) experienced a fall. In contrast, of the 502 patients who received knee immobilizers, only 8 patients (1.6%) fell. This difference achieves statistical significance (P = .04). Given the considerable costs associated with hospital falls and the significant reduction of these falls related to knee immobilizer use shown in this study, the authors recommend that knee immobilizers be given to TKA patients as standard practice.

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Quanjun, Cui Laura H, Schapiro Matthew C, Kinney Peter, Simon Andrew, Poole Wendy M, Novicoff,.Reducing costly falls of total knee replacement patients.. 28 (4),335-8.

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