Knee replacement surgery decreased after NHS policies on patient's weight were introduced
Knee replacement surgery decreased after NHS policies on patient's weight were introduced
New research has found that weight/body mass index (BMI) policies introduced by NHS commissioning groups in England are associated with a decrease in knee replacement surgery and may be contributing to health inequalities. With one in ten people likely to need a knee replacement, many thousands of patients are directly affected by these policies.
The National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) funded study, led by the University of Bristol and published in PLOS ONE today, suggest regions that introduced policy changes for access to knee replacement surgery based on a patient's weight/BMI have seen a decline in surgery.
Over the last decade rules have been bought in by NHS clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) across England to change the access to hip and knee replacement surgery for patients who are overweight or obese. However, there is a lot of regional difference, with some regions having no such policy and in the strictest examples patients being denied access to an elective hip or knee replacement operation until their BMI is below a certain threshold.
The research team analyzed the rates of knee replacement surgery of 481,555 patients between January 2009 and December 2019 using data from the National Joint Registry and compared regions with and without a BMI policy.
The aim of the research was to investigate the effect of these commissioning policies on access to elective knee surgery and if there was any evidence of worsening health inequalities through a disproportionate effect on less affluent groups in society.
The study found the policies put in place by NHS CCGs to change access to knee replacement based on a patient's weight/BMI are linked with a decrease in surgery and could have led to postcode health inequalities.
The research highlighted that the rules may be worsening health inequalities as policy introduction can be linked to a rise in patients having private surgery and a reduction in the most economically deprived patients receiving surgery at
all.
Rates of surgery fell in all patient groups, and not just for overweight or obese patients, who the policy was targeted at.
Dr. Joanna McLaughlin, NIHR Doctoral Fellow in the Bristol Medical School: Translational Health Sciences (THS) and lead author of the study, said: "NHS policy on whether people can immediately access referral for knee replacement surgery if they are overweight or obese varies depending on where you live in England.
"Our study raises the concern that these policies are linked with worsening health inequalities with fewer NHS operations for the least affluent groups in society when policies are introduced."
The research team urge commissioners and policy decision-makers to reconsider restrictive policies that affect access to elective surgery as a matter of urgency. The researchers also suggest that the recent formation of Integrated Care Systems from existing CCG groups is an important opportunity for positive changes to policy position.
Reference: Medical Express: by University of Bristol
No thoughts on “Knee replacement surgery decreased after NHS policies on patient's weight were introduced”
Articles - Most Read
- Home
- LIVER DIS-EASE AND GALL BLADDER DIS-EASE
- Contacts
- African Wholistics - Medicines, Machines and Ignorance
- African Wholistics -The Overlooked Revolution
- African Holistics - Seduced by Ignorance and Research
- The Children of the Sun-3
- Kidney Stones-African Holistic Health
- The Serpent and the RainBow-The Jaguar - 2
- PART ONE: DIS-EASE TREATMENT AND HEALTH-3
- 'Tortured' and shackled pupils freed from Nigerian Islamic school
- King Leopold's Ghost - Introduction
- PART ONE: DIS-EASE TREATMENT AND HEALTH-4
- PART ONE: DIS-EASE TREATMENT AND HEALTH-2
- PART ONE: DIS-EASE TREATMENT AND HEALTH-5
- African Wholistics - Medicine
- Menopause
- The Black Pharaohs Nubian Pharaohs of Ancient Egypt
- The Mystery System
- PART ONE: DIS-EASE TREATMENT AND HEALTH-6
Who's On Line?
We have 103 guests and no members online
Ad Agency Remote
Articles - Latest
- The Male G Spot Is Real—and It's the Secret to an Unbelievable Orgasm
- Herbs for Parasitic Infections
- Vaginal Care - From Pubes to Lubes: 8 Ways to Keep Your Vagina Happy
- 5 Negative Side Effects Of Anal Sex
- Your Herbs and Spices Might Contain Arsenic, Cadmium, and Lead
- Struggling COVID-19 Vaccines From AstraZeneca, BioNTech/Pfizer, Moderna Cut Incidence Of Arterial Thromboses That Cause Heart Attacks, Strokes, British Study Shows
- Cartilage comfort - Natural Solutions
- Stop Overthinking Now: 18 Ways to Control Your Mind Again
- Groundbreaking method profiles gene activity in the living brain
- Top 5 health benefits of quinoa
- Chromolaena odorata - Jackanna Bush
- Quickly Drain You Lymph System Using Theses Simple Techniques to Boost Immunity and Remove Toxins
- Doctors from Nigeria 'facing exploitation' in UK
- Amaranth, callaloo, bayam, chauli
- 9 Impressive Benefits of Horsetail
- Collagen The Age-Defying Secret Of The Stars + Popular Products in 2025
- Sarcopenia With Aging
- How to Travel as a Senior (20 Simple Tips)
- Everything you need to know about mangosteen