H. Hoenig et al., WHAT IS THE ROLE OF TIMING IN THE SURGICAL AND REHABILITATIVE CARE OFCOMMUNITY-DWELLING OLDER PERSONS WITH ACUTE HIP FRACTURE, Archives of internal medicine, 157(5), 1997, pp. 513-520
Objective: To determine the relationship of surgical repair of acute h
ip fracture within 2 days of hospital admission, followed by more than
5 sessions per week of physical and occupational therapy (PT/OT), to
outcomes after acute hip fracture. Design: Comparison of hip fracture
outcomes via secondary analysis of data obtained by retrospective medi
cal record review according to timing of surgical repair and frequency
of PT/OT, adjusted for patient, medical care, and hospital characteri
stics. Sample: The study included the medical records of 1880 elderly
Medicare recipients admitted from the community to 284 acute care hosp
itals in 5 states during 1981 and 1982 or 1985 and 1986 with a primary
diagnosis of acute hip fracture who underwent surgical repair and rec
eived PT/OT. Interventions: None. Main Outcome Measures: The postopera
tive day when ambulation first occurred, the length of hospital stay,
and return to the community. Results: Earlier surgical repair was asso
ciated with a shorter length of hospital stay (5 fewer days, P<.001) w
ithout a statistically significant increase in medical complications.
High frequency PT/OT was associated with earlier ambulation (odds rati
o [OR], 1.76; 95% confidence limits [CL], 1.50, 2.07). Patients who un
derwent early surgical repair had shorter lengths of stay (6.5 fewer d
ays, P<.001), were more likely to return to the community (OR, 1.45; 9
5% CL, 1.16, 1.81), and had better B-month survival (OR, 2.8; 95% CL,
2.06, 3.88), and patients younger than 85 years had fewer in-hospital
complications (11% vs 4%, P<.001). Conclusion: Surgical repair within
the first 2 days of hospitalization and more than 5 PT/OT sessions per
week were associated with better health outcomes in a nationally repr
esentative sample of elderly patients with hip fracture.