Arthritis and the global business of hip replacements

arthritis-hip-replacements
Photo by www.pixabay.com

Who’d have known there were 2.150 million Australians who suffer from arthritis? It was one of the questions in the 2021 Census (asking about long-term health problems). I don’t recall answering the question, but don’t doubt that I ticked the top 3 boxes.

The three biggest long term health issues in Australia are: mental health, arthritis and asthma.

The 2021 Census was the first time the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) asked about diagnosed long-term health conditions. Two million-plus people reported having at least one of the top three – mental health (2,231,543), arthritis (2,150,396) and asthma (2,068,020).

Of those who responded to the survey, 4.78 million reported having one of the 10 long-term health conditions; 1.49 million reported having two of the health conditions and 772,142 had three or more.

Let’s focus on health issue number two – arthritis. There’s a bit of it in my family and when the weather is cold or I have been playing guitar, typing or weeding, ‘Arthur’ reminds me he is king of my castle.

So far it is just swollen hand joints (thumb and pinkie) and occasional pain in the hip and femur. Despite having major surgery on both knees in 1969, I’ve ducked the serious inflammation that attacks hips and knees.

I once met the late jazz musician, Don Burroughs, who suffered with arthritis in later life. He told me he’d successfully taught himself different techniques for playing clarinet, flute and saxophone. Veteran guitarists will tell you similar stories of how to play, holding the instrument in different positions.

The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare shed some light on the subject in 2020 with a report that looked at an array of musculo-skeletal conditions that affect the bones, muscles and joints. These conditions include long-term (chronic) conditions such as osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile arthritis, back pain and problems, gout, and osteoporosis or osteopenia (low bone density).

The latter caught my attention as I recently checked in with the Bone Bus and had scans done of my hips, knees, spine and upper arms.

The Bone Bus is a travelling clinic with the sole purpose of measuring patients’ bone density. The scan is one of three procedures people over 70 can have that is wholly funded by Medicare. I had the pneumonia and shingles vaccines about 18 months ago. But ever since then, I was away travelling when the bone bus came to town.

According to John Hopkins Medicine, a bone density test is used mainly to diagnose osteopenia and osteoporosis. It is also used to determine your future fracture risk.

I have not seen a doctor about my scan yet (it can take a week to see a GP in this town – or any other for that matter), but I’m fairly relaxed about it. I’ve had a couple of tumbles in the garden and in the house in recent years and suffered only bruises of the flesh and ego.

Not so for some of my peers, who have either had a hip or knee replacement or fractured a hip after a fall.

Friends who broke a hip report a good rate of recovery. One friend was back driving six weeks later. Another was getting about town on a walking stick within a month.

The main issue when an older person falls and fractures a hip is the risk of death. The one-year mortality rate after hip fracture is 21%, once the fracture is surgically addressed. If not, the one-year mortality is about 70%.

This means 4 out of 5 older persons will survive the first year after a hip fracture. This mortality rate has remained unchanged since the 1980s.

The Conversation goes one step further, saying a hip fracture can often be a ‘death sentence’. The statistics around hip fractures in the elderly are alarming, notably that 27% of hip fractures occurred after a fall in an aged care facility.

Age is a key risk factor, with hip fractures more likely to occur in those aged 65 or older. They’re primarily a result of a fall, or when the hip collides with a solid object such as a kitchen bench. However, they can also occur when there has been little or no trauma.

Cognitive impairment such as dementia can increase the risk of falling. Frailty, poor vision, the use of a combination of medications, and trip hazards in the home also increase the likelihood of falls. Osteoporosis, a disease characterised by low bone mass and degradation of bone tissue, is another significant risk factor for hip fractures.

Data from the AIHW  collated in 2017 found that 93% of new hip fractures were the result of a fall-related injury, of which 87% were minimal trauma (low-impact) falls. Nearly half (48%) occurred in the person’s private home, and, as mentioned, 27% occurred in an aged care facility.

Falls and fractures aside, if your hips are problematic, replacement surgery with advanced robotics and titanium prosthetics is the preferred option to waiting for the inevitable fall.

The hip replacement procedure has improved greatly since it started to become commonplace in the early 1990s. This YouTube video explains by animation how a compromised hip joint is replaced.

Osteoarthritis is usually the condition that leads to requiring a hip replacement. People with bad hips do have options (first line of treatment is anti-inflammatory drugs). Eventually, though, GPs are more likely to suggest a hip replacement than not. The technology for the procedure has improved to the point where the successful, pain-free recovery rate is above 95% and 90%-95% at the 10-year mark.

Surgeons have been able to replace worn-out or diseased hip joints since the 1960s, but it wasn’t until the late 1980s that people began actively seeking it out as an option.

About 44,000 Australians sign up for a hip replacement every year with more than 90% reporting a good outcome.

An article attributed to Fortune Business Insights shows that hip replacement surgery is a $US6.57 billion global business. Despite a 12.1% decline in turnover through 2020 (as Covid postponed elective surgeries), the business of replacing hips is huge.

Globe Newswire reported that the global market size is projected to hit US9.91 billion by 2028. The forecast growth is due to the “growing prevalence of osteoarthritis in the geriatric community.

The market’s growth is also attributable to “favourable health reimbursement policies.

We are fortunate in Australia that such procedures are paid for by Medicare, albeit after a lengthy waiting period. A hip replacement can cost between $19,439 and $42,007 (median $26,350). You probably know people who have had both hips done. Three cheers for free medical care (introduced by Gough Whitlam in 1974 and further enhanced by Medicare in 1984).

Meanwhile I should, I know I should, go back to the aged person’s gym that focuses on stretching and flexing, working on the all-important core strength which helps us keep our balance.

As for knees, which are more problematic, I already wrote about that.

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Risks of Olympic proportions

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https://flic.kr/p/GPBj4 William Pacheco/creative commons

So we’re watching the re-run of the World’s Fastest Man beating the World’s Second Fastest Man in the 100 metre Olympic dash. My heart goes out to the also-rans. Trayvon Bromell of the US, despite coming last in a field of eight, covered the 100m final in 10.05 seconds. Goodness me, I thought. It takes me one minute and 21 seconds to drag the wheelie bin 97m from the car port to the roadside (admittedly uphill), huffing like an old grampus (old Scots saying thought to mean ‘like a fat fish out of water’).

Make no mistake, people, you need to be in peak condition if you want to complete at the Olympic level. She Who Swears at the Remotes was channel surfing, realising that the various iterations of Channel 7 are showing different Olympic events at the same time. Flick flick, she went. Some Australian guy, apparently swimming in the open sea, had opened up a one minute lead on the rest of the pack. It was heartening to see all the support vessels hovering nearby in case of cramp, loss of will to keep going, cossie-loss, shark attack, remnant arctic ice or other. Flick, flick.

Oh, there’s blokes spearing through the water in kayaks, or maybe they are canoes? Foresooth, here are two women spearing through the water in a kayak/canoe.

“Look at their shoulder muscles,” I marvelled, adjusting the heat pack on my compromised AC joint.

Now we’re on to pole vaulting, a sport we take a mild interest in because we know someone who competed in this event at Commonwealth Games level.

“Crikey, there’s so many ways of killing yourself associated with this sport,” She observed. I googled “pole vault accidents”.

Some YouTube contributors delight in posting clips of athletes failing or hurting themselves, including an incident at the Rio Olympics where a Japanese competitor’s penis dislodged the crossbar. This is akin to funniest home videos, a program with which I am not amused. Pole vaulters have died competing in this sport, or have ended up in wheelchairs. So the supposedly funny/shocking videos are insensitive to say the least.

According to Chris Hord, assistant pole vault coach at the University of North Florida, pole vaulting is the deadliest track and field event.

The sport is inherently dangerous because you run at full speed, almost 100-metre sprint with a 15- to 17-foot fibreglass pole in your hand, then you’re bending it, trying to get upside down to clear a bar in the air.”

Sunshine Coast physiotherapist and former Commonwealth Games pole vault competitor Andrew Stewart agrees.

“The worst part is if you accidently land on the tip of the pole, it will bend and throw you anywhere.”

Stewart competed from 1970 to 1984, culminating with a 5th in the 1984 Commonwealth Games event in Brisbane. His own experiences of pole vaulting as a dangerous sport included breaking a leg and spraining both ankles, in the days when landing pads were much smaller.

This 2012 study by the American Journal of Sports Medicine makes for sobering reading.

A few weeks back our choir director Kim Kirkman was encouraging the tenors to reach a high B by pretending we were throwing the discus. That took me back to compulsory school sports days where we were taught to throw javelins or discus by over-zealous sports teachers whose mission in life was apparently to distract boys (and maybe girls too) from thinking too much about the onset of puberty. Now that I think on it, perhaps all that javelin and discus tossing is to blame for my problematic shoulder joint, which responds to steroid injections and physiotherapy but the pain returns when I fall back into bad habits (like not doing the archery exercise, hunching over the keyboard like a man possessed).

But getting back to the men’s 100 metre sprint and other such events, the victors feeling obliged to do a victory lap wearing their nation’s flag like a cape. Mr Bolt, a man much-used to the attention of the media, struck a few poses, the images carried around the globe in an instant. Our journalists salivated over the Jamaican champ’s promise to return to Australia (he was last here in 2012).

Media sports coverage, such as it is

Just so you know, journalists work with some limitations when it comes to reporting on the Olympics. To actually attend as a media correspondent you need accreditation. The accrediting body, the International Olympic Committee (IOC), has a fair bit of muscle.

For example, they banned the use of animated GIFs during the Olympics. GIFs are short animated videos on loop which often pop up on social media. They are more often visual gags designed to shock or amuse, but oft-times capture immortal moments of triumph.

As Business Insider reported, it appears the Olympic ban is not being observed in certain segments of the social media with many GIFs to be found on tumblr and twitter.

A GIF which appeared, if I’m correct, before the IOC ban was announced, depicted a beggar lad alone in Rio’s slums overlooking a blazingly lit Olympic stadium and fireworks display. It briefly touched a nerve before being subsumed by the weight of status updates on Facebook.

The other media curiosity revealed at the Rio Olympics was the Washington Post’s use of robotic reporting technology. The Poynter Institute reported that Heliograf, using data and language templates, churns out medal tallies, event schedules and even results, the automated news briefs forming part of the Post’s Olympic blog.

FOMM reader Ms Hand alerted us to this under-reported technology breakthrough. We’re not surprised. Speech-to-text technology has existed for quite some time, of benefit to vision-impaired writers, scribes with temporary or permanent RSI or lawyers who can no longer afford secretaries to transcribe their daily dictation.

For all you know I could be talking aloud and one of those smart programmes is writing down what I say. Isn’t that right, Siri?

As a former newspaper scribe, I have mixed feelings about machines taking over what was once the detail work of junior journalists. Attending to sports results, racing form, TV guides and the like was the cadet journalist’s way to learning about deadlines, accuracy, punctuation and the consequences of making mistakes.

Meanwhile, back at the pole-vaulting pit, it takes skilful human beings to track down the vitally important Olympic stories like the Japanese pole vaulter who failed to qualify because his penis touched the bar. News Ltd scribe Dan Felson’s breathless, euphemism-laden piece (‘let down by his trouser-friend’) went global. Read it if you must.

Despite its ever-present risks of injury or injured pride, pole vaulting continues to attract devotees.

Sydney man Albert Gay, 73, set an Australian record this year at the Australian Masters Athletics event. The Macarthur Chronicle reported that Gay ‘leapt into the record books’ for his age group with a 3m attempt (the Olympic world record is 6.03 metres, set this week by Brazilian Thiago Braz Da Silva).

Gay said he took up athletics and pole vaulting when he retired, at 62.

“It tests your bravery,” he said. “You’ve got to be a little bit of an idiot to do it.”

SWSR adds: “I prefer to confine myself to channel surfing from the comfort of the recliner, where the only danger to be faced is the possibility of the Staffie unexpectedly launching himself into my lap.”