Institution
British Orthopaedic Association
Nonprofit•London, United Kingdom•
About: British Orthopaedic Association is a nonprofit organization based out in London, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Hip fracture & MEDLINE. The organization has 276 authors who have published 23 publications receiving 823 citations. The organization is also known as: BOA.
Topics: Hip fracture, MEDLINE, Labour law, Evidence-based practice, Government
Papers
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TL;DR: A two-phase research programme delivered over 27 months will be used to develop and subsequently test the feasibility of an occupational advice intervention to facilitate return to work and usual activities in patients undergoing lower limb arthroplasty.
Abstract: There are an increasing number of patients of working age undergoing hip and knee replacements. Currently there is variation in the advice and support given about sickness absence, recovery to usual activities and return to work after these procedures. Earlier, sustainable, return to work improves the health of patients and benefits their employers and society. An intervention that encourages and supports early recovery to usual activities, including work, has the potential to reduce the health and socioeconomic burden of hip and knee replacements. A two-phase research programme delivered over 27 months will be used to develop and subsequently test the feasibility of an occupational advice intervention to facilitate return to work and usual activities in patients undergoing lower limb arthroplasty. The 2 phases will incorporate a six-stage intervention mapping process: Phase 1: Intervention mapping stages 1–3:
Phase 2: Intervention mapping stages 4–6:
The study will be undertaken in four National Health Service (NHS) hospitals in the United Kingdom and two Higher Education Institutions. OPAL (Occupational advice for Patients undergoing Arthroplasty of the Lower limb) aims to develop an occupational advice intervention to support early recovery to usual activities including work, which is tailored to the requirements of patients undergoing hip and knee replacements. The developed intervention will then be assessed with a specific focus on evaluating its feasibility as a potential trial intervention to improve speed of recovery to usual activities including work. The study was registered retrospectively with the International Standard Randomised Controlled Trials Number (ISRCTN): 27426982
(Date 20/12/2016) and the International prospective register of systematic reviews (PROSPERO): CRD42016045235
(Date 04/08/2016).
7 citations
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TL;DR: Medicine, law and religion are the three traditional learned professions and surgeons study to achieve specialised knowledge and supplement this with training and experience.
Abstract: Medicine, law and religion are the three traditional learned professions. With professionalism should come both privilege and responsibility. As surgeons we study to achieve specialised knowledge and supplement this with training and experience. Our patients and our Governments grant us certain
7 citations
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TL;DR: Examination of the immediate results suggests that protection by means of a plaster jacket had at least a palliative effect, relieving acute symptoms and allowing early rehabilitation in patients with sciatic pain.
Abstract: 1. Between 1936 and 1945, 525 patients with sciatic pain were treated at the Princess Elizabeth Orthopaedic Hospital, Exeter. Of these, 225 had neurological signs and they were selected for review; 147 were traced. 2. Of these, 123 were treated by means of plaster jackets and twenty-four were treated by other methods. The late results of treatment in the two groups were about the same, roughly one-third being "cured," one-third "relieved," and one-third "not relieved." 3. Nevertheless examination of the immediate results suggests that protection by means of a plaster jacket had at least a palliative effect, relieving acute symptoms and allowing early rehabilitation. Moreover it should be emphasised that in limiting the investigation to cases of sciatica with evidence of nerve root pressure only the more severe cases have been included. 4. Permanent relief after immobilisation in plaster was greatest when the duration of symptoms was short, and when the patient was treated during his first attack. It was least in patients who showed all three signs of nerve root pressure—diminished ankle jerks, hypo-aesthesia, and muscle hypotonicity. 5. Absence of tendon reflexes due to nerve root pressure, and areas of hypo-aesthesia, tend to remain permanently; but diminution of reflexes and loss of muscle power may recover.
7 citations
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TL;DR: Techniques for the adaptation and removal of casts are discussed, common complications, the provision of appliances and information to patients, as well as some of the problems that may occur when safety is not seen as an inherent part of practice.
Abstract: In the second of two articles, Margaret Prior and Susan Miles discuss techniques for the adaptation and removal of casts. They also consider common complications, the provision of appliances and information to patients, as well as some of the problems that may occur when safety is not seen as an inherent part of practice.
5 citations
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TL;DR: Leaders should encourage teams to follow evidence-based guidelines, reduce variation, take an active role in supply chain processes, and develop new ideas to improve quality and safety of care.
Abstract: Orthopaedic leaders need to create a shared vision and must establish trust, open lines of communication, and buy-in from all team members in order to establish a culture that is supportive of quality improvement. Leaders should encourage teams to follow evidence-based guidelines, reduce variation, take an active role in supply chain processes, and develop new ideas to improve quality and safety of care. With rapidly changing medical and surgical advancements, orthopaedic leaders must continually adapt in the face of evolving challenges.
2 citations
Authors
Showing all 276 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Matthew L. Costa | 47 | 286 | 6200 |
Iain K. Moppett | 31 | 132 | 3160 |
Xavier L. Griffin | 24 | 95 | 1740 |
Peter Smitham | 16 | 66 | 985 |
Anil Sharma | 14 | 35 | 675 |
Julian F. Maempel | 10 | 28 | 277 |
Navraj S Nagra | 9 | 27 | 277 |
Usman Ahmed | 8 | 25 | 416 |
Feiran Wu | 8 | 25 | 189 |
Ben A Marson | 8 | 41 | 251 |
Shahbaz S. Malik | 7 | 21 | 125 |
Abhinav Singh | 6 | 12 | 125 |
G. Blundell Jones | 6 | 7 | 173 |
Reza Mansouri | 6 | 33 | 200 |
Christopher P. Bretherton | 5 | 8 | 155 |