Early Check‑Ins Don’t Change the Outcome of Hip Surgery
Thu Feb 26 2026
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A new study followed 770 people who had hip replacements. The researchers wanted to see if a visit to the clinic three months after surgery would help patients feel better a year later. They split the group into those who had that visit and those who did not. The patients were also divided based on whether they reported good or bad results at that three‑month check‑in.
For patients who felt unhappy after the first visit, doctors gave extra therapy or tests. The goal was to see if these extra steps could lift their recovery to the level of those who already felt satisfied. The team also used a score called the Oxford Hip Score (OHS) to set a threshold that would flag patients at risk of poor long‑term recovery.
In addition, the study looked at overall life quality using the EQ‑5D tool and a risk calculator called EndoCert. The researchers expected that people who had more treatment after the early visit would show better pain relief and function at one year. However, the data did not support this idea. The extra visits did not help those who had bad early results reach the same level of recovery as their better‑off peers.
Overall, people still made progress in healing and lost pain over time. But those who started off with a poor three‑month outcome stayed behind even after a year. This pattern suggests that the first few months after hip replacement give clues about how well a patient will do in the long run.
The takeaway is that doctors could use early check‑ins to spot patients who might need more help. Targeted care plans could then be offered sooner, potentially improving outcomes and saving costs in the future.
https://localnews.ai/article/early-checkins-dont-change-the-outcome-of-hip-surgery-8250427d
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