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Joint Replacement Access in 2016 A Supply Side Crisis
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Joint Replacement Access in 2016 A Supply Side Crisis

Thomas K. Fehring, Susan M. Odum, Jennifer L. Troyer, Richard Iorio, Steven M. Kurtz and Edmund C. Lau
The Journal of arthroplasty, v 25(8), pp 1175-1181
01 Dec 2010
PMID: 20870384

Abstract

Life Sciences & Biomedicine Orthopedics Science & Technology
Demand for primary and revision arthroplasty is expected to double in 10 years Coincident with this is a decreased interest in arthroplasty by residents Retirement of arthroplasty surgeons further threatens access This study determines if supply will meet demand Survey data were used to calculate the 2016 workforce Demand in 2016 was estimated using the Nationwide Inpatients Sample Between 2008 and 2016 400 arthroplasty specialists and 1584 generalists will enter the workforce By 2016, 1896 arthroplasty surgeons will retire using 65 years as a conservative retirement age whereas 4239 will retire using 59 years as a baseline retirement age In 2016 the model estimated a procedural shortfall ranging from 174 409 (down arrow 18 6%) using conservative retirement assumptions (age 65 years) to 1 177 761 (up arrow 69 4%) using baseline retirement assumptions (age 59 years) This economic model predicts a supply side crisis that threatens patient access to specialty care Immediate steps to stimulate supply must be taken

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136 citations in Scopus

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Collaboration types
Industry collaboration
Domestic collaboration
Web of Science research areas
Orthopedics
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