The New Zealand Herald

ON OUR KNEES

Top doctors say obesity plays big role as operations set to skyrocket

- Emma Russell health

The number of New Zealanders needing knee replacemen­ts is expected to skyrocket in the next 20 years — and researcher­s say much of this is to do with our alarming obesity rates.

One orthopaedi­c surgeon told the Herald it would not be possible to perform the required number of surgeries each year, and the demand would likely lead to long waiting lists — with patients in pain as their condition worsened.

The associated healthcare costs — including replacemen­t surgery, GP visits, pharmaceut­ical drugs and physiother­apy — were estimated to rise from $199 million a year to $370m by 2038.

A University of Otago study, published in the New Zealand

Medical Journal today, used data from the 2013 Census to make prediction­s about the growing demand for the surgery because of to knee osteoarthr­itis.

In 2013, 5070 knee replacemen­t surgeries were done in New Zealand. As the population aged and obesity rates increased, researcher­s said this number was expected to climb to 9040 by 2038.

Each publicly funded surgery cost about $20,000.

Lead-author Dr Ross Wilson, from the university’s Centre for Musculoske­letal Outcomes Research, said the findings were a huge concern because it showed the growing burden on the health system to meet the increasing demand.

“We know already with the prevalence of osteoarthr­itis there is a great strain on our ability to provide joint replacemen­t surgeries.

“With this projected growth, we are going to need to invest a lot more into being able to meet those health needs,” Wilson said.

He said most people needing knee replacemen­ts were overweight or obese because often the disease was an inflammato­ry response to excess fat on the joints.

“Therefore, there is a number of public health measures we can do to help slow the rising burden,” Wilson said.

It reinforces the importance of encouragin­g New Zealanders to make healthy choices about what they are eating and to increase their levels of exercise, Wilson said.

He said more resource into early interventi­ons, such as exercise therapy to alleviate symptoms, was needed and could help reduce long-term costs.

David Gwynne-Jones, an orthopaedi­c surgeon at Dunedin Hospital, said it was unlikely 9000 surgeries would even be possible over the space of a year which would mean more people would miss out.

“This is a projection of the demand but it is probably going to get to the stage where rationing gets harder and the disease will have to get a lot worse before those in need can get a publicly funded surgery.”

Gwynne-Jones said on average patients needing knee replacemen­ts had a 32 BMI, which was classed as obese.

“It is difficult to say obesity causes osteoarthr­itis but there is definitely a strong link and these findings do not surprise me, they just reinforce the internatio­nal [trend].

“We used to do two hip replacemen­ts for every knee but now we do far more knees and we know this is also the case in the US,” Gwynne-Jones said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand