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JBJS - 2026-05-21 - Journal Article

Surgeons May Be "Touched Out": The Ever-Increasing Workload of Telephone Calls and Electronic Messages in Total Joint Arthroplasty.

Lam AD, Parikh N, Leipman JH, Abe EA, Hoffman E, Linton AA, Bido J, Purtill JJ, Fillingham YA, Krueger CA

retrospective cohortLOE IIIn = 45,216 patients; 277,729 telephone calls and 16,966 electronic messages analyzed30-day preoperative and 90-day postoperative periods per patient; data span 2016–2022

Topics

arthroplasty
PMID: 42166561DOI: 10.2106/JBJS.25.01191View on PubMed ->

Key Takeaway

Perioperative touchpoints per TJA patient more than doubled from 2016 to 2022, reaching a mean of 17.8 for TKA and 16.1 for THA by 2022.

Summary Depth

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Summary

This study quantified perioperative telephone and electronic message volume across 45,216 primary THA and TKA patients at a single institution from 2016 to 2022. Postoperative touchpoints dominated, with patients averaging 4.4 calls and 2.8 electronic messages after surgery. Total perioperative touchpoints increased 105% for TKA and 121% for THA over the study period, with commercial insurance independently associated with higher touchpoint volume versus Medicare (beta -0.31, 95% CI -0.41 to -0.21, p<0.001).

Key Limitation

The study captures touchpoint volume but not content, duration, or clinical complexity, making it impossible to determine what proportion represent preventable contacts addressable by protocol changes versus necessary clinical communication.

Original Abstract

BACKGROUND

With evolving patient expectations and practice models, perioperative communication through telephone and web encounters, termed "touchpoints," gains further importance. This study quantifies the workload created by telephone calls and electronic messages during patient episodes of care and analyzes their change over time.

METHODS

We retrospectively reviewed 277,729 telephone calls and 16,966 electronic messages within the 30-day preoperative periods and the 90-day postoperative periods of 45,216 patients who underwent primary total hip arthroplasty (THA) or total knee arthroplasty (TKA) from January 1, 2016, to December 31, 2022. Touchpoints were temporally trended by year to characterize utilization over time. Regression analysis was performed to determine factors predictive of increased touchpoint utilization.

RESULTS

Preoperatively, patients had a mean of 2.2 telephone calls (2.2 for THA and 2.1 for TKA) and 2.3 electronic messages (2.3 for both THA and TKA). Postoperatively, patients had a mean of 4.4 telephone calls (4.1 for THA and 4.6 for TKA) and 2.8 electronic messages (2.8 for both THA and TKA). From 2016 to 2022, the total perioperative touchpoints increased by 105% (8.7 to 17.8 touchpoints) for patients who underwent TKA and by 121% (7.3 to 16.1 touchpoints) for patients who underwent THA. Medicare insurance was independently associated with fewer touchpoints compared with commercial insurance (beta estimate, -0.31 [95% confidence interval, -0.41 to -0.21]; p < 0.001).

CONCLUSIONS

Practices can now expect to handle a mean of 17.8 touchpoints for patients who undergo TKA and 16.1 for patients who undergo THA. The increase in touchpoint utilization underscores a growing strain on orthopaedic practices' resources as reimbursement for these procedures continues to decrease. Future policy discussions must acknowledge and remunerate the time spent communicating via telephone calls and electronic messages to offset their increasing frequency.

CLINICAL RELEVANCE

As orthopaedic care begins to extend beyond the operating room into patient communication pathways, understanding how the growing touchpoint utilization can strain resources and adversely affect high-quality patient care is essential.