KMID : 1207720150070020207
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Clinics in Orthopedic Surgery 2015 Volume.7 No. 2 p.207 ~ p.210
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Transparency to Reduce Surgical Implant Waste
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Kiel J. Pfefferle
Matthew F. Dilisio Brianna Patti Stephen D. Fening Jeffrey T. Junko
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Abstract
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Background: Rising health care costs and emphasis on value have placed the onus of reducing healthcare costs on the surgeon.
Methods: Financial data from 3,973 hip, knee, and shoulder arthroplasties performed at a physician owned orthopedic hospital was retrospectively reviewed over a two-year period. A wasted implant financial report was posted starting the second year of the study. Each surgeon's performance could be identified by his peers.
Results: After posting of the financial report, 1.11% of all hip and knee arthroplasty cases had a waste event compared to 1.50% during the control year. Shoulder arthroplasty waste events occurred twice as often than that observed in hip and knee arthroplasty during the study period. A decrease in waste events was observed but was not statistically significant (p = 0.30).
Conclusions: Posting a non-blinded wasted implant data sheet was associated with a reduction in the number of wasted orthopedic surgical implants in this series, although the reduction was not statistically significant.
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KEYWORD
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Implant waste, Knee arthroplasty, Hip arthroplasty
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