Early Outcomes of Orthopedic Pre-surgical Patients Enrolled in an Intensive, Interprofessional Lifestyle Medicine Program to Optimize Health. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Recently, lifestyle medicine (LSM) application has shown feasibility for musculoskeletal pain patients with co-existing lifestyle-related chronic diseases. This study describes early results of a LSM program for musculoskeletal patients with goals to optimize health prior to orthopedic surgery. Fifty-four patients (age: 61 ± 11 years; 39 [72%] females) completed the program from 3/8/22-12/1/23. Data included patient goals, utilization, goal attainment, and patient outcomes. Most patients (41/54 [76%]) enrolled with established surgical dates. Mean BMI was 43.2 ± 5.3 kg/m2, and 89% had ≥2 lifestyle-related chronic diseases. The majority reported impaired sleep (79%) and zero cumulative minutes of physical activity/week (57%). Mean program duration was 13 ± 8 weeks involving 5 ± 4 visits with members of the interprofessional team. Fifty-two (96%) patients successfully attained pre-program goals, and 49/54 (91%) met their surgical goal. Of the patients enrolled without surgical dates, 11/13 (85%) optimized their health and proceeded to surgery. Forty-two (78%) patients reported decreases in weight and BMI, averaging 11 ± 7 lbs and 1.8 ± 1.3 kg/m2, respectively. Rates of improvement in pain, PROMIS-10 physical and mental health, and PHQ-4 were 52%, 37%, 45%, and 47%, respectively. These data demonstrate the feasibility and effectiveness of a LSM program to address whole-person health optimization and enable orthopedic patients to improve lifestyle behaviors and proceed to orthopedic surgery.

authors

  • Prather, Heidi
  • Leupold, Olivia
  • Suter, Cara
  • Mehta, Nartana
  • Griffin, Karen
  • Pagba, Mark
  • Hall, Kelyssa
  • Taverna-Trani, Alessandra
  • Rose, Dana
  • Jasphy, Laura
  • Yu, Su Xiao
  • Cushner, Fred
  • Della Valle, Alejandro Gonzalez
  • Cheng, Jennifer

publication date

  • May 16, 2024

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC11562270

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85193351237

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1177/15598276241252799

PubMed ID

  • 39554966