Journal article

Associations between socioeconomic status and primary total knee joint replacements performed for osteoarthritis across Australia 2003-10: Data from the Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Replacement Registry

SL Brennan, SE Lane, M Lorimer, R Buchbinder, AE Wluka, RS Page, RH Osborne, JA Pasco, KM Sanders, K Cashman, PR Ebeling, SE Graves

BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders | Published : 2014

Open access

Abstract

Background: Relatively little is known about the social distribution of total knee joint replacement (TKR) uptake in Australia. We examine associations between socioeconomic status (SES) and TKR performed for diagnosed osteoarthritis 2003-10 for all Australian males and females aged ≥ 30 yr. Methods: Data of primary TKR (n = 213,018, 57.4% female) were ascertained from a comprehensive national joint replacement registry. Residential addresses were matched to Australian Census data to identify area-level social disadvantage, and categorised into deciles. Estimated TKR rates were calculated. Poisson regression was used to model the relative risk (RR) of age-adjusted TKR per 1,000py, stratified..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This study was funded by Arthritis Victoria, Grant in Aid (LEX 18573). SLB was supported by National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia Early Career Fellowship (GNT1012472). AEW is the recipient of NHMRC Career Development Award (GNT545876). We would like to thank Ann Tomkins, and the AOA NJRR team for providing access to these data.