Outpatient Surgery Magazine

Manager's Guide to Joint Replacement - January 2016

Outpatient Surgery Magazine, providing current information on Surgical Services, Surgical Facility Administration, Outpatient Surgery News and Trends, OR Excellence and more.

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6 8 • O U T PA T I E N T S U R G E R Y M A G A Z I N E • J A N U A R Y 2 0 1 6 Post-surgical care of joint replacement patients is rapidly changing, with more rehab taking place at home and at the physical therapist's rather than at costly inpatient rehab facilities or nursing homes. Surgical facilities didn't pay nearly as much attention to where joint replacement patients rehabbed before the advent of bundled payments, which pay facilities for an episode of care that begins before surgery and ends 30 to 90 days after. Providers share in savings if they bring expenses down. A typical stay in a nursing home after surgery can cost up to $15,000, nearly 4 times as much as an average home-care episode ($3,500) and a course of outpatient physical therapy ($700). Plus, studies have shown that joint replacement patients do no better with physical therapy than with daily activity. Increasingly, inpatient rehab is reserved for the elderly with other medical problems, and for patients who don't have a good support system at home. Matthew S. Austin, MD, director of joint replacement services at the Rothman Institute at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia, is among those who believe that you don't need to have a rigidly structured rehab program after joint replacement. At Rothman, healthy, active total joint patients may choose to be in charge of their own thera- py, using a computer program called Force Therapeutics, which guides them through exercises and tracks both compliance and pain. It's not for everybody, but the economic impact of the self-therapy route is significant. "Post-discharge care can occupy a significant amount of the total cost of joint replacement — in some case up to 50%," says Dr. Austin. "We're trying to appropriately utilize services." PHYSICAL THERAPY The Changing Post-Surgical Rehab Landscape • ADDED EXPENSE Post-surgical rehab has become a target for cuts, with more patients being sent straight home after joint replacement, where they can get in-home nursing visits and go to outpa- tient physical therapy.

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