The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Just how much will hip surgery set you back?

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FINDING out the cost of surgery isn’t always straightfo­rward. We used price-comparison websites and contacted hospitals to find the highest and lowest prices for the most common private procedures.

The difference­s are often stark – smaller hospitals and those in the North of England are generally cheaper, compared to those in London, the South East and South West. However, this isn’t always the case, so it’s worth shopping around. The difference between hospitals even within the same city can amount to thousands.

JUMP THE YEAR-LONG QUEUE FOR NEW HIP

BY FAR the most popular paidfor procedures are knee and hip replacemen­ts. NHS patients can expect to wait an average of about four months for orthopaedi­c surgery, but 56,000 are facing delays of more than a year.

HOW MUCH DOES IT COST?

Prices of hip replacemen­ts vary widely depending on region. Hospitals in the South West and South East tend to be more expensive – charging up to £15,500 per hip.

The East Midlands seems to be the cheapest, with costs starting at around £9,000. Knee replacemen­ts cost upward of £19,000 per knee in some London hospitals, and as little as £9,000 in Margate.

WHAT ELSE DO I NEED TO KNOW?

Be aware of extra charges for diagnostic tests. An MRI scan – the basic scan that can detect arthritis in the knee or hip – will not show if the joint is damaged and in need of replacing. Consultant­s may order more tests, such as a CT scan, which takes detailed pictures of the knee or hip, to determine whether a replacemen­t is really needed.

Diagnostic tests are sometimes not included in a package, and can incur extra charges of between £300 and £1,000.

And while consultant­s must tell you the cost, they often do not know exactly. Be sure to check with the medical secretary at the hospital first.

NEARLY £2,000 TO FIX YOUR CATARACTS

AT LEAST a third of Britons have a problem with impaired vision, the most common being cataracts – when the eye’s natural lens becomes cloudy.

But accessing a simple procedure to resolve this on the NHS is increasing­ly difficult, with roughly 600,000 waiting for treatment. It is no wonder that private healthcare brokers say that cataract surgery, where the lens is replaced, is another popular paid-for procedure.

Glaucoma, where a build-up of fluid damages the optic nerve at the back of the eye, is another common eye condition, affecting one in 50 over-40s, and one in ten over-75s. It results in blindness if untreated. Treatment involves draining the excess liquid in the eye, either by stimulatin­g the drainage tissue with a laser, or by creating a tiny hole in the eye to expel the fluid via surgery.

HOW MUCH DOES IT COST?

Costs vary between roughly £1,800 and £3,500 per eye, depending on your area and type of lens you choose. Multifocal lenses (which essentiall­y allow you to live glasses-free) are about £1,000 dearer than monofocal alternativ­es, which are set to a fixed focus for one distance.

Laser procedures for glaucoma cost between £500 and £1,000, while surgery can be up to £5,000 depending on severity.

WHAT ELSE DO I NEED TO KNOW?

Cataract procedures are among the safest. But there is a common complicati­on which occurs in one in ten patients, potentiall­y resulting in extra costs.

With severe cataracts, the surgeon may not be able to remove all the damaged lens in one go.

In these cases, there is a risk remaining cells will grow on the back of the new lens, affecting vision – a condition known as posterior capsule opacificat­ion. If this happens, a second procedure may be needed.

Not all providers will include a follow-up corrective operation in the final costings, so check beforehand.

‘If there is a complicati­on and you don’t want to go back to the private provider, you will still be eligible for NHS treatment,’ adds David Hare, chief executive of the Independen­t Healthcare Provider Network.

However, if you do suffer problems, and need another operation on the NHS, you’ll be back on that waiting list.

As for glaucoma, it is worth having a test done at the optician before deciding on treatment, to check the pressure of the fluid in your eye. If the pressure is below 25, experts say there is little risk of permanent sight damage if you wait a month or two for treatment – so it may be worth sticking it out on an NHS waiting list.

Even if the pressure is 25 to 29, you can wait a couple of weeks. Anything above 30 should be treated immediatel­y.

DON’T HANG AROUND FOR HERNIA REPAIR

ROUGHLY 10,000 NHS patients who need a hernia repair, or similar surgery, have been waiting at least a year. There are three different types of hernia: inguinal, where a piece of the gut or fatty tissue bulges through a weak spot in the groin muscles; hiatus, where the stomach slips upward through a weakness in the diaphragm muscle that usually holds it in place, causing acid indigestio­n; and umbilical – where the bulge happens because the intestine pushes through the muscles in the abdomen near the belly button.

HOW MUCH DOES IT COST?

With all hernia repair, once the protruding tissue is pushed back into place, a piece of mesh is attached to the weak area of

muscle to strengthen it. The cost depends on the type of hernia. Hernias in the groin and hiatus hernias tend to be slightly more expensive than umbilical hernias. This is largely because surgeons will often repair inguinal and hiatus hernias using minimally invasive, keyhole techniques, called laparoscop­ic surgery, to avoid a large scar and reduce the risk of infection.

Prices for hernia repairs range from £2,000 to £10,000, with the average around £5,000 for a laparoscop­ic procedure.

WHAT ELSE DO I NEED TO KNOW?

There are a number of new methods of repairing hiatus hernias, some of which come with eye-watering price tags. Usually, the problem is resolved by pushing the stomach back into position, and wrapping the upper part of the stomach around the oesophagus to create a tighter sphincter, stopping food and digestive juices moving back and forth to the throat.

But some hospitals claim using implants – such as special hoops to tie around the oesophagus – leads to better, longerlast­ing results. Parkside Private Hospital in Wimbledon, South London, is charging nearly £10,000 for its procedure that promises to resolve the problem using a new device made of titanium beads, used to keep the closure extra tight.

The technology is not widely used within the NHS. What’s more, don’t be fooled by surprising­ly cheap inguinal operations. We found that some that were priced very competitiv­ely – under £2,000 – do not use laparoscop­ic methods. This means the procedure involves a large incision, greater risk of complicati­ons and days in hospital.

THE HIGH COST OF VARICOSE VEINS TREATMENT – AND IT MIGHT NOT WORK

VARICOSE veins are bulging, purple blood vessels in the legs and ankles caused by poor circulatio­n. Treatment for them has long been a popular paid-for service.

Varicose veins affect 40 per cent of the population – and while NHS GPs will refer patients for a procedure if they suffer aching, swollen legs or itchy, damaged skin, they won’t if it’s considered a purely cosmetic problem.

HOW MUCH DOES IT COST?

There are several ways to treat varicose veins, each with a different price tag. The most common is ablation therapy.

This involves having a narrow tube, or catheter, threaded into the vein via a small cut above the knee, where a hot probe is inserted. This destroys the problemati­c vein.

Ablation costs anything from £750 up to £3,000 per leg. For smaller veins, doctors may recommend something called sclerother­apy, where foam is injected into the veins. This causes scarring which eventually closes off the vein. Sclerother­apy costs between £200 and £600 a leg.

One leading specialist has recently begun offering a new, noninvasiv­e technique called echotherap­y, which uses heat to shrink and close off the veins. But here, the heat is able to penetrate the skin from outside the body.

Vascular surgeon Professor Mark Whiteley is the only clinician to offer echotherap­y – at his Whiteley Clinic centres in London, Guildford and Bristol – costing from £3,039.

WHAT ELSE DO I NEED TO KNOW?

While non-invasive options like echotherap­y may seem tempting, due to the little downtime after the procedure, it is new – and not yet gold standard. Studies show the success rate for ablation operations are between 85 and 95 per cent, and they are standard on the NHS.

While sclerother­apy may be cheaper, the success rates can be as low as 50 to 60 per cent, raising the risk of further procedures.

STOP GYNAECOLOG­ICAL DISCOMFORT

WAITING lists for NHS gynaecolog­ical treatment have risen by 60 per cent since the beginning of the pandemic. Today, one in 20 of those with painful conditions such as fibroids, cysts and endometrio­sis, or who are in need of a hysterecto­my, are facing delays of at least a year for treatment.

The most common treatment for fibroids – non-cancerous, fibrous growths in the womb that don’t respond to medication – is a procedure to remove them.

This can be surgery, with cuts made in the abdomen, or nonsurgica­l techniques that block the blood supply to the fibroids, or embolisati­on. The removal of cysts and tissue related to endometrio­sis – in which cells that usually line the womb grow elsewhere – almost always involve keyhole surgery. Hysterecto­mies, which are sometimes performed to treat fibroids, can be performed using keyhole techniques too.

HOW MUCH DOES IT COST?

Surgical procedures for fibroids and cysts cost between £5,000 and £10,000, depending on the location and time needed to recover in hospital. Some providers charge less for a more minimally-invasive procedure, done via keyhole surgery, involving less downtime in hospital and fewer scars. Other techniques, such as embolisati­on which cuts the blood supply to the growths, or procedures that destroy fibroids using heat energy, cost from £8,000.

The cost of endometrio­sis treatment ranges from £5,000 for standard laparoscop­ic, or keyhole, surgery, and £10,000 for robotic surgery. It can cost up to £25,000 for very complex cases. Private hysterecto­mies range from £4,000 to £8,500. Procedures that involve major surgery, removing the womb via a large cut in the abdomen, cost more than those that extract it via the vagina or a small cut in the groin.

WHAT ELSE DO I NEED TO KNOW?

Non-surgical fibroid treatments are not as well evidenced as traditiona­l, surgical techniques. They are only deemed suitable for women who do not wish to have more children, due to unknown risks to fertility.

When the procedure is not performed by a highly-experience­d specialist, ten per cent of patients suffer complicati­ons.

Be sure to choose your consultant wisely – a good surgeon will be able to boast a one per cent failure or complicati­on rate, research shows.

Many private consultant­s offer a two-in-one package for diagnosis and treatment of endometrio­sis.

The troublesom­e tissue is cut out via a keyhole incision, but some providers will charge more for complex endometrio­sis extraction. The extent of the problem is often

impossible to predict, so be aware of potential extra costs.

TIME TO TACKLE PROSTATE PROBLEMS

ROUGHLY one in three British men over 50 suffer an enlarged prostate. The walnut-sized gland sits below the bladder, and if it swells it can cause problems with going to the toilet – needing to go all the time, but often not being able to. Complicati­ons include recurrent urinary tact infections and severe pain. Yet, the thousands who do not respond to medication can expect to wait at least four-and-a-half months for one of many procedures that could resolve the problem.

HOW MUCH DOES IT COST?

The most common procedure is transureth­ral resection of the prostate (TURP), whereby part of the prostate gland is removed. The surgery, including one to three nights in hospital, costs between £3,000 and £9,000, depending on location. The average price is about £6,000.

Also popular is a minimally invasive option such as UroLift – where a surgeon inserts an implant to hold the prostate away from the bladder, relieving symptoms in just 15 minutes. Expect to pay about £5,000.

Prostate artery embolisati­on is also popular, as it is performed under local anaestheti­c, involving little to no downtime. The procedure, which costs between £6,000 and £8,000, involves injecting particles into blood vessels via a tube in the groin. This cuts blood supply to the prostate, shrinking it.

WHAT ELSE DO I NEED TO KNOW?

Most of the surgeons offering UroLift – which are performed in a day clinic – are based in the South of England. Prostatema­tters.co.uk has an extensive list of urologists experience­d in the procedure.

Studies show that in about ten per cent of cases, prostate artery embolisati­on can fail if the blood vessels are too weak or thin to take the injections. In these cases, doctors may suggest patients have TURP, which means paying twice or waiting at least four months to have surgery on the NHS.

PILES CAUSING PAIN? DON’T SIT AROUND

EMBARRASSI­NG problems that affect the back passage, like haemorrhoi­ds and fissures (small tears in the skin), affect at least eight million Britons. Yet patients face lengthy waits to have them sorted, as NHS GPs often consider them non-urgent. New treatments like those using heat to destroy haemorrhoi­ds are not offered on the NHS.

HOW MUCH DOES IT COST?

Procedures for haemorrhoi­ds cost anywhere between £550 and £3,000 depending on the type of treatment you choose.

Full surgery – a haemorrhoi­dectomy – is around £2,700, including an overnight in hospital if needed.

Less invasive procedures such as banding – where tiny rubber bands are placed inside the back passage to cut off the blood supply to the haemorrhoi­ds – are cheaper, as they are over in a few minutes. The average price is roughly £1,500, including a follow-up appointmen­t. Newer, non-invasive treatments, involving hot probes which starve the piles of their blood supply, cost around £2,000.

For very small haemorrhoi­ds, doctors may suggest injections which cause the piles to shrivel up and vanish in weeks. The average cost is roughly £300.

For anal fissures, procedures range from £1,500 to £3,500, depending on recovery time in hospital and the method used.

WHAT ELSE DO I NEED TO KNOW?

Non-invasive treatment for haemorrhoi­ds may not resolve the problem in one procedure, you may have to pay for a second interventi­on.

WHAT ABOUT SCANS AND TESTS?

PRIVATE diagnostic services are a fast-growing area. A report published last week by private health sector analysts LaingBuiss­on noted that private MRI and CT scans have jumped in popularity by at least 50 per cent in the past year. Detailed scans can be useful to spot everything from spinal fractures to joint problems and cancerous growths deep within organs.

Then there are private blood tests, which have exploded in popularity over the past few years – with multiple online providers checking for everything from hormone health to nutritiona­l deficienci­es with a finger prick.

Private hospitals have their own in-house blood-testing services too. Simply pay for your blood test online and make an appointmen­t at the local hospital within three days. The results are usually sent out within a week.

HOW MUCH DOES IT COST?

CT scans, also called CAT scans, cost between £400 and £900. They use X-rays to produce detailed images of tumours, bone fractures and internal bleeding, and take between ten to 20 minutes to complete, depending on the location.

MRI scans produce slightly more detailed images of soft tissue and bone, and tend to be slightly cheaper, priced between £200 and £800. They are more uncomforta­ble, as you have to lie still in a tube for up to 90 minutes.

Blood tests range from £25 to £300, depending on what exactly the provider is testing for.

WHAT ELSE DO I NEED TO KNOW?

TRADITIONA­L ‘closed’ MRI scanners – the type where you lie on a bed which is then slid into a tube – tend to be about £200 to £300 cheaper than open ones, which you can walk into.

Open MRIs are popular with people who feel claustroph­obic, but they are not as widely available.

It is a good idea to visit your GP for a referral for any scan or blood test, as some private providers charge extra if you don’t. Nuffield Health, for instance, charges £25 for patients who require a blood test without a GP referral.

Most private services do not include a full debrief from a consultant who can explain your results – the data is sent to you online, along with a basic, written interpreta­tion. But you can arrange for the results to be shared with your NHS GP, who can discuss them for free.

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