Increased mortality in hip fracture patients living alone. A NOREPOS study
Fulltekst
RELATERTE DOKUMENTER
effect of increasing comorbidity on excess mortality in younger hip fracture patients. In
Sensitivity analysis restricted to 11,984 men and women 50-79 years at fracture with hip fracture from 1 January 2002- 31 December 2005 (NORHip database) with mortality follow-up
Expected mortality was calculated by multiplying the number of person-years in hip fracture patients with the death rate of the general population within strata of 0.5 year age
The increased duration of excess mortality may be a result of the reduced 6-months and 1-year ex- cess mortality observed in hip fracture patients ≥85 years, which may have left
We investigated whether patients’ cognitive function affects surgical treatment, risk of reoperation, and mortality after hip fracture, based on data in the Norwegian Hip
Compliance with national guidelines for antibiotic prophylaxis in hip fracture patients: a quality assessment study of 13 329 patients in the Norwegian Hip Fracture Register..
Keywords: Hip fracture, Fast track, Mortality, Reoperation, Surgical site infection, Admission time, Time to surgery, Length of stay, Readmission, Norwegian hip fracture
Title: Hip fracture in patients with cognitive impairment Year: