Problematic Hip Replacement
Cross-source consensus on Problematic Hip Replacement from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
Other
Other
Other
Highlighted claims
- The study focused on unanswered research questions about people who develop problems after hip replacement surgery in the UK. — Top 10 priorities for problematic hip replacement research: a priority setting partnership led by the British Hip Society and the James Lind Alliance
- The project excluded questions about preventing problems after primary hip replacement. — Top 10 priorities for problematic hip replacement research: a priority setting partnership led by the British Hip Society and the James Lind Alliance
- Problematic hip replacement includes failed, painful, worn-out, infected, or otherwise problematic implants. — Top 10 priorities for problematic hip replacement research: a priority setting partnership led by the British Hip Society and the James Lind Alliance
- The burden of problematic hip replacements is greater than revision surgery numbers indicate. — Top 10 priorities for problematic hip replacement research: a priority setting partnership led by the British Hip Society and the James Lind Alliance
- Many patients with complex problems do not undergo revision surgery because they may be unsuitable for surgery or have chronic pain. — Top 10 priorities for problematic hip replacement research: a priority setting partnership led by the British Hip Society and the James Lind Alliance