Total hip replacement in immigrants and Swedish patients. Evaluation of preoperative care, socioeconomic background, patient-reported outcomes and risk of reoperation

Detta är en avhandling från University of Gothenburg

Sammanfattning: Surgery involving Total Hip Arthroplasty (THA) aims to reduce pain, and improve mobility, function and quality of life in patients with osteoarthritis, when non-surgical treatment has failed. Despite good or excellent results in the majority of patients, some of them are dissatisfied. This variability in outcome may depend on several factors. Preoperative information, hospital care and postoperative rehabilitation may also be more demanding if the patient is not familiar with the domestic language, belongs to a cultural minority or lives in poor socioeconomic circumstances. This thesis aimed to investigate the influence of ethnicity and socioeconomic factors on the outcome after primary THA. Demographic information and data relating the surgical procedure and patient reported outcome collected preoperatively and one year after the operation and the presence of any revision/ reoperation were retrieved from the Swedish Hip Arthroplasty Register. Cross-matching with data from the Patient Register and Statistics, Sweden was performed to retrieve information about comorbidities, cohabiting, education, and country of birth. Interviews and a self-administered questionnaire on preoperative information, pain and patients satisfaction including the DASS 21 score for the mental health of patients were also used. The patients were analysed in four groups (born in Sweden, the Nordic countries, Europe and outside Europe including the Soviet Union) or two groups (born inside or outside Sweden). Patients from both groups expressed concern about inadequate pre-operative information on implants used, pain relief, choice of anaesthesia, no or too short a time to put questions to the surgeon and an overall stressful situation. All the immigrant groups had more negative interference relating to self-care (p<=0.02), some immigrant groups tended to have more problems with their usual activities (p<=0.05) and patients from Europe and outside Europe more frequently reported problems with anxiety / depression (p<=0.005). Patients born abroad showed an overall tendency to report more pain on the VAS than patients born in Sweden. One year after the operation the immigrant groups reported more problems in all the EQ-5D dimensions. After adjustment for co-variates including the preoperative baseline value most of these differences remained apart from pain/discomfort and when it came to immigrants from the Nordic countries, anxiety/depression as well. One year after the operation pain according to the VAS had decreased substantially in all groups. The immigrant groups indicated more pain than those born in Sweden before and after adjustment for covariates (p<0.001). Patients born outside Sweden had poorer mental health than those born in Sweden. The risk of revision and reoperation within a period of two years did not differ between immigrants and patients born in Sweden. The difficulties for the patients born outside Sweden may depend on cultural differences, communication problems and differences in indications. This patient group could benefit from improved pre-and postoperative information and other measures to facilitate and improve their rehabilitation.

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