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AOSSM 2023 Annual Meeting Recordings no CME
Patient Reported Outcomes Associated With “Complet ...
Patient Reported Outcomes Associated With “Completely Better” Status After Hip Arthroscopy
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Video Transcription
Video Summary
In this video, Sean Meredith from the University of Maryland discusses a study on patient-reported outcomes after hip arthroscopy. The aim of the study was to determine the prevalence and characteristics of patients who reported being completely better two years after the procedure. The study included 62 patients from the Maryland Orthopedic Registry, and various patient-reported outcome measures were used. The results showed that 47% of patients reported being completely better. Factors such as physical function, pain interference, and surgical satisfaction at two years were associated with completely better status. The study identified thresholds for predicting this status, with improvement in physical function and surgical satisfaction being the most important predictors. The limitations of the study include its retrospective nature and lack of pre-operative predictive factors.
Asset Caption
Sean Meredith, MD
Keywords
patient-reported outcomes
hip arthroscopy
prevalence
physical function
surgical satisfaction
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