View all news

Socio-economic inequalities in access to joint replacement surgery in England

A knee x-ray

Generic image of a knee X-rayi stock

Press release issued: 27 April 2023

The provision of joint replacement surgery in England is subject to socio-economic inequalities, despite a years-long effort to reduce them. A University of Bristol-led study of hip and knee surgeries over a ten-year period, published in PLOS Medicine today [27 April], concludes that care providers must take further action to address variation in access to these frequently performed operations.

Joint replacements are cost-effective elective surgeries that are frequently performed in developed settings around the world. As populations age and obesity rises, the need for these surgeries is likely to increase, which will place an increasing public health burden on health systems. People living in the most deprived areas have the greatest need for surgery, and inequalities were reported in the UK over a decade ago. National Health Service (NHS) England has tried to address this, in part by delivering part of its publicly funded orthopedic activities within the private sector. With growing financial strain on the NHS, the current picture is unclear.

Dr Erik Lenguerrand, Senior Lecturer in Medical Statistics and colleagues merged data from the National Joint Registry and the Office for National Statistics’ official population statistics to investigate inequalities in provision of joint replacement for osteoarthritis. They identified all primary hip and knee replacements for osteoarthritis between 2007 and 2017 in England (675,342 hip and 834,146 knee replacements overall). Despite an overall improvement in the number of operations performed and less geographical variation in rates of surgery, inequalities between the most and least affluent areas remained large, and inequalities between most and least affluent areas have remained fairly constant.

For knee replacement, the social deprivation inequalities were only observed for the privately funded procedures, whereas for hip replacement, evidence of disparities was observed for both publicly and privately funded procedures. These findings could help healthcare commissioners to identify how joint replacement provision should be provided in the NHS to best address these disparities. One limitation was that this study was unable to investigate inequalities by certain important domains, such as ethnicity.

Dr Lenguerrand said, "Our study has shown that over the last decade socioeconomic inequalities in access to hip and knee replacement surgery remain wide, where those living in the most deprived areas have the least access to this surgery, even though they have the greatest clinical need."

Paper

'Inequalities in provision of hip and knee replacement surgery for osteoarthritis by age, sex, and social deprivation in England between 2007-2017: A population-based cohort study of the National Joint Registry' by E Lenguerrand et al. in PLOS Medicine [open access]

Further information

About the National Joint Registry (NJR)
The NJR, which covers England, Wales, Northern Ireland, the Isle of Man, and Guernsey, collects information on hip, knee, ankle, elbow and shoulder joint replacement surgery, across both the NHS and independent sector. Data collection began in April 2003 and data submission for NHS organisations was made mandatory from April 2011. Now with over 3.5 million procedure records, the NJR is the largest orthopaedic registry in the world with an international reputation. Recognised as a ‘global exemplar’ of an implantable medical devices registry, the NJR monitors the performance and effectiveness of joint replacement implants in different types of joint replacement surgery, in order to provide an early warning of issues relating to patient safety and improve clinical standards; thus benefiting patients, clinicians and the orthopaedic sector as a whole. 

For more information about the NJR see: www.njrcentre.org.uk

Edit this page