Two years after total knee replacement surgeries, patients in poor
communities who hadn’t gone to college had average pain scores that
were about 10 points worse than patients in the same neighborhood
who had some college education, the study found.
In wealthy communities, however, the difference in pain scores with
and without college was only 1 point.
“Poorer outcomes were seen with a larger ‘dose’ of community
poverty,” said lead study author Dr. Susan M Goodman of the Hospital
for Special Surgery and Weill Cornell Medical School in New York
City.
“When we looked at the interaction with education, we found that
some college education was protective,” Goodman said by email. “Even
for those from poor communities, outcomes were far better for the
educated.”
It’s possible that people without college education had delays in
seeking treatment that contributed to worse pain and function before
they even had surgery, Goodman said. A lack of college education
might also contribute to lower levels of health literacy, making it
harder for patients to understand and stick with complex medical
regimens after surgery, including intensive rehabilitation
exercises.
The study involved 3,790 patients who had total knee replacement
surgeries, including 2,438 people with at least some college
education. In addition to focusing on pain and disability after the
operations, the researchers also looked at education levels for each
patient as well as community-level income information based on
records from the U.S. census.
Patients with no college in the study were about 68 years old on
average compared to about 67 for people with at least some college.
They were also more likely to be female, Hispanic, obese, and have
at least one complex medical condition in addition to their knee
issues.
Many patients without any college lived in poor neighborhoods and in
communities where a college education was less common.
There wasn’t a meaningful association between pain levels and the
overall level of education in the community, researchers reported in
Arthritis Care and Research.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how education levels might influence the impact of poverty on
knee surgery outcomes.
[to top of second column] |
Another limitation of the study is that it included a relatively
small proportion of patients from poor neighborhoods, which may have
made it harder to detect meaningful differences in surgery outcomes
that might have been apparent in a larger group.
Knee surgery outcomes are also highly dependent on pain and function
levels before the operation, noted Dr. Tomas Sveikata, a surgeon at
Republican Vilnius University Hospital in Lithuania.
“If the surgery is done in the earlier stage of the disease, the
final result will be better,” Sveikata, who wasn’t involved in the
study, said by email. “Sometimes patients come in very late stages
of the disease with big deformities and very poor function. Then
it's impossible to achieve (an) excellent postoperative result.”
Even so, the results suggest that clinicians need to consider
patients’ education levels when communicating with them about
follow-up care, said Leigh Callahan, associate director of the
Thurston Arthritis Research Center at the University of North
Carolina in Chapel Hill.
“Individuals with more education living in communities with higher
levels of poverty might have better outcomes than individuals with
less education living in those communities because more education
may help someone communicate with the health care team better about
follow-up care,” Callahan, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by
email.
“People should not be afraid to tell their physicians, nurses,
physical therapists or any other providers that they are not being
clear as to what they are to do when they are rehabilitating,”
Callahan added.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2BPPfIA Arthritis Care and Research, online
November 22, 2017.
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |