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Moral reasoning strategies of orthopaedic surgery residents

Mercuri, John J; Karia, Raj J; Egol, Kenneth A; Zuckerman, Joseph D
BACKGROUND: Little is known about the moral reasoning utilized by orthopaedic surgery residents when resolving moral dilemmas. METHODS: Sixty-three residents in an accredited program took the Defining Issues Test-2, an online examination designed to measure and analyze moral reasoning. Scores approximate how often residents utilize three schemas in their moral reasoning: personal interest, maintaining social norms, and postconventional. Scores were analyzed for differences among years of training, previous literature, and established norms. RESULTS: Approximately 9.5% of residents utilized personal interest heavily in their moral reasoning, 27% utilized maintaining norms, and 63.5% utilized postconventional reasoning. There were no significant differences between years of training. The fourth-year (R4) class recorded the highest utilization of principled reasoning, while the fifth-year (R5) class recorded the lowest. The range of principled reasoning scores narrowed from the first year (R1) to R5. The principled reasoning scores of residents were significantly lower than previously reported scores of professional degree-holders and medical students, and empirically lower than previously reported scores of orthopaedic attendings and medical students. CONCLUSIONS: Residents utilized principled reasoning less frequently than expected for physicians. It remains unclear as to what factors contributed to high utilization of principled reasoning in the R4 class but low utilization in the R5 class. Our cross-sectional data suggest that each year of training homogenizes toward a class-specific utilization of principled reasoning. It remains unclear why residents utilized principled reasoning less than orthopaedic attendings, medical students, and other professional degree-holders.
PMID: 23515996
ISSN: 1535-1386
CID: 248332

Operative treatment of nonunion following distal fibula and medial malleolar ankle fractures

Khurana, Sonya; Karia, Raj; Egol, Kenneth A
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the outcomes following operative treatment of nonunited rotational distal fibula and medial malleolar ankle fractures. METHODS: Seventeen patients were identified as having a nonunion of a rotational ankle fracture. All patients were evaluated clinically, radiographically, and functionally with the Short Musculoskeletal Functional Assessment (SMFA) questionnaire. They were divided into lateral and medial malleolus groups and compared with 44 patients following a nonoperative (SE2/3) ankle fracture and 25 patients who underwent operative fixation of their SE4 ankle fracture for functional comparison. RESULTS: Two of the 17 patients were excluded. The patients in the medial malleolar group were notably older than those in the other groups. Nonunions included 12 distal fibulas and 3 medial malleoli. All patients were treated with open reduction with plate and screw fixation or screw fixation alone. Adjunctive grafting was performed in all but 2 cases. The average time to healing was 5.2 months post surgery. At latest follow-up, mean 33.9 months, all nonunions had resolved. Standardized SMFA scores differed notably among the groups in the Bothersome, Emotional, and Mobility categories. There was no difference between lateral malleolar nonunion patients and surgically treated SE4 patients. CONCLUSIONS: Reports of nonunions of fractures of lateral and medial malleoli have been rarely reported. Operative treatment of these nonunions in this study led to reliable bony healing. Patients who underwent surgery for these nonunions ultimately had similar outcomes and range of motion compared with patients who underwent operative treatment for acute ankle fractures. Level of Evidence: Level III, retrospective comparative series.
PMID: 23520294
ISSN: 1071-1007
CID: 255322

The potential of accelerometers in the evaluation of stability of total knee arthroplasty

Khan, Humera; Walker, Peter S; Zuckerman, Joseph D; Slover, James; Jaffe, Fredrick; Karia, Raj J; Kim, Joo H
An accelerometer attached to the anterior proximal tibia was investigated as an evaluation of knee stability of Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) patients while performing daily activities. Acceleration data of 38 TKA knees with a minimum follow up of 6months were compared with 34 control knees. The activities performed were: walking three steps forward and coming to a sudden stop; turning in the direction of non-tested knee; sit-to-stand; and stepping up and down from a 7 inch step. The acceleration results showed significant differences between TKA and controls while stepping down and while turning in the non-tested knee direction. The higher accelerations with the TKA group may have represented an objective measure of stability, even if this was not directly discernible to the patient.
PMID: 23122873
ISSN: 0883-5403
CID: 249532

Factors influencing patients' willingness to pay for new technologies in hip and knee implants

Schwarzkopf, Ran; Sagebin, Fabio M; Karia, Raj; Koenig, Karl M; Bosco, Joseph A; Slover, James D
Rising implant prices and evolving technologies are important factors contributing to the increased cost of arthroplasty. Assessing how patients value arthroplasty, new technologies, and their perceived outcomes is critical in planning cost-effective care, as well as evaluating new-technologies. One hundred one patients undergoing arthroplasty took part in the survey. We captured demographics, spending practices, knowledge of implants, patient willingness to pay for implants, and preferences related to implant attributes. When patients were asked if they would be satisfied with "standard of care" prosthesis, 80% replied "no". When asked if they would pay for a higher than "standard of care" prosthesis, 86% replied "yes". The study demonstrated that patients, regardless of their socio-economic status, are not satisfied with standard of care implants when newer technologies are available, and they may be willing to share in the cost of their prosthesis. Patients also prefer the option to choose what they perceive to be a higher quality or innovative implant even if the "out of pocket" cost is higher.
PMID: 23142436
ISSN: 0883-5403
CID: 249522

Outcomes After Fixation of Proximal Humerus (OTA Type 11) Fractures in the Elderly Patients Using Modern Techniques

Shulman, Brandon S; Ong, Crispin C; Lee, James H; Karia, Raj; Zuckerman, Joseph D; Egol, Kenneth A
PURPOSE: To investigate the effects of age on the clinical, functional, and radiographic outcomes of patients with proximal humerus fractures treated operatively with locking plates. METHODS: Between February 2003 and July 2012, all patients who sustained a proximal humerus fracture who presented to our institution were enrolled into a database. Patients were followed up at 1, 6, 12, 26, and 52 weeks postoperatively with physical examination and radiographs. Validated functional outcomes scores were collected at 6 and 12 months. Complications were recorded as they occurred. Statistical analysis was conducted to assess for functional, physical, or radiographic differences between patients age younger than 65 and patients age 65 or older. RESULTS: Of the 147 consecutive patients treated operatively for a proximal humerus fracture, 115 (78%) patients with an average follow-up of 16 months met the inclusion criteria for this study. The young cohort (patients < 65) included 70 patients with an average age of 53, whereas the elderly cohort (patients >/= 65) included 45 patients with an average age of 73. The older cohort had significantly more women (P = .04), but there was no statistical difference in fracture type between the age groups. There were no differences in the radiographic measures of screw penetration, humeral head height, and neck-shaft angle between the age groups. There were no differences in physical examination scores between the age groups. There were no significant differences in functional outcomes or complication rates between the age groups. CONCLUSION: Treating proximal humerus fractures operatively with locked plates can overcome the challenges of poor bone quality that often occur with increasing age. Age should not play a significant role in the decision-making process for treating proximal humerus fractures that would otherwise be indicated for surgical fixation.
PMCID:3739412
PMID: 23936736
ISSN: 2151-4585
CID: 495062

Tibial plateau fractures with and without meniscus tear--results of a standardized treatment protocol

Forman, Jordanna M; Karia, Raj J; Davidovitch, Roy I; Egol, Kenneth A
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to determine what patient and injury factors are associated with the presence of a meniscus tear in tibial plateau fractures. We also sought to compare functional outcome, pain scores, and range of motion between patient groups with and without meniscal injury. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 99 patients with 101 acute tibial plateau fractures were included in the study cohort. Patients were divided into two groups: those with and without meniscus tears at the time of initial injury. Statistical analysis with Student's t-test for continuous variables and chi square test for categorical variables was performed to compare those with and without a meniscal tear. Logistic regression was performed to identify the variables that predicted the presence of a meniscus tear and repeated ANOVA measures were used to assess functional outcome scores. RESULTS: Fifty-four patients with 56 tibial plateau fractures (55%) were found to have an associated meniscal tear. The average amount of joint depression in this group was 12.3 mm (range: 2.0 to 29.5 mm). The remaining 45 patients with 45 fractures (45%) had an average depression of 5.4 mm (range: 0.0 to 12.8 mm). Degree of tibial plateau depression was the only significant predictor of meniscal injury. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that amount of depression in tibial plateau fractures is a significant predictor of the occurrence of a meniscus tear with an odds ratio of 1.36. We also found no significant difference in the functional outcome, pain scores, and knee range of motion between the group with and without meniscus tears at the longest follow-up interval. These findings suggest that acute repair of meniscal injury following traumatic fracture of the tibial plateau could produce functional results similar to those patients that did not sustain a meniscus tear.
PMID: 24032616
ISSN: 2328-4633
CID: 779642

SYNOVIAL FLUID BIOMARKERS OF INNATE IMMUNE ACTIVITY ARE PREDICTIVE OF KNEE OSTEOARTHRITIS PROGRESSION [Meeting Abstract]

Band, P. A.; Wisniewski, H. -G.; Liublinska, V.; Pattanayak, C.; Colon, E.; Heeter, J.; Karia, R.; Stabler, T.; Balazs, E. A.; Kraus, V.
ISI:000303223300200
ISSN: 1063-4584
CID: 166847

Who pays for poor surgical quality? Building a business case for quality improvement

Dimick, Justin B; Weeks, William B; Karia, Raj J; Das, Smita; Campbell, Darrell A Jr
BACKGROUND: Both providers and payors bear the financial risk associated with complications of poor quality care. But the stakeholder who bears the largest burden of this risk has a strong incentive to support quality improvement activities. The goal of the present study was to determine whether hospitals or payors incur a larger burden of increased hospital costs associated with complications. STUDY DESIGN: We merged clinical data for 1,008 surgical patients from the private sector National Surgical Quality Improvement Program to the internal cost-accounting database of a large university hospital. We then determined the marginal costs of surgical complications from the perspective of both hospitals (changes in profit and profit margin) and payors (increase in reimbursement paid to the hospital). In our analyses of cost and reimbursement, we adjusted for procedure complexity and patient characteristics using multivariate linear regression. RESULTS: Reimbursement for patients without complications ($14,266) exceeded hospital costs ($10,978), generating an average hospital profit of $3,288 and a profit margin of 23%. When complications occurred, hospitals still received reimbursement in excess of their costs, but the profit margin declined: reimbursement ($21,911) exceeded hospital costs ($21,156), yielding an average profit of $755 and a profit margin of 3.4%. Complications were always associated with an increase in costs to health-care payors: complications were associated with an average increase in reimbursement of $7,645 (54%) per patient. CONCLUSIONS: Hospitals and payors both suffer financial consequences from poor-quality health care, but the greater burden falls on health-care payors. Strong incentives exist for health-care payors to become more involved in supporting quality improvement activities.
PMID: 16735208
ISSN: 1072-7515
CID: 501742