TMC’s Tucson Orthopaedic Institute Improves Patient Outcomes with Surgical Precision

Source: Inside Tucson Business published on May 26, 2017

Written by Logan Burtch-Buss

Photo Credit to Eric Suhm

When Tucson resident Melissa Anderson underwent her first full knee replacement surgery in 2010, she said the painful rehabilitation process lasted three months. Roughly two months ago, Anderson received her second full knee replacement surgery, and it only took seven weeks before the 65-year-old woman was out dancing and riding a recombant bicycle with her husband, John.

Anderson’s most recent surgery took place at TMC’s Tucson Orthopaedic Institute with the use of Stryker’s Mako Robotic-Arm Assisted Total Knee application.

Typically, a knee replacement is done using manual instruments, and cutting-guides have to be placed and positioned according to a surgeon’s visual, said Dr. Russell G. Cohen, who handled Anderson’s second replacement. Traditional replacements are taught in a certain manner and guides are placed in similar fashion for all patients.

But not every knee is the same, Cohen said, and he said one of the pitfalls of knee replacement is the recovery time because the process involves recreating “soft tissue tensioning.” By having a robot with which the patient’s anatomy is registered from a CAT scan, the physician can feel how they want the knee to end up before ever starting the procedure, rather than make the cuts and try to catch up and make everything fit just right.

By fine-tuning every procedure to the physical specifications of each patient down to the millimeter, the recovery process is expedited, and patient satisfaction is improved as a result.

“I was absolutely shocked at the difference with the difference I felt between the first one and the second one,” Anderson said. “There is a really deep knee-bone pain you get with that kind of surgery … and I didn’t have it. I was worried about doing it again because I didn’t want to spend another three months recovering, but I was released from [physical therapy] in four weeks.”

Cohen has completed several dozen Mako Total Knee surgeries, and said a great majority of those patients have left the hospital the following day, all recovering much like Anderson. In addition to the implementation of the Mako, Cohen said credit for recovery improvement must also be given to improvements to anesthesia practices and other hospital procedure.

Though TOI has already been recognized for its excellence in orthopedic practice, constantly improving upon that level of service is of the utmost importance to TMC moving forward, said chief operations officer Karen Mlawsky.

Mlawsky added that with a “superstar” like Cohen in such an important practice such as orthopedics, in which TMC holds the majority market share, it is important to continue to support physicians and surgeons, and implementing robotics does just that.

“TMC believes that it is really important for us to partner with our physicians, and when one comes forward and says that they believe the technology is going to make an impact on our patient’s outcomes, we want to listen,” she said. “We believe that orthopedics is very important to us, we believe that robotics is very important to us, and the other side of that is our role in Tucson. We are the only community hospital and we think it is important to do things that help people stay well. This technology is about getting people well quickly and keeping a person active, that’s our mission.”

According to TMC, total knee replacements in the United States are expected to increase 673 percent by 2030, and Cohen said the success of the Mako in handling full knee (and hip) replacements bodes well for the community’s future.

“There are some things that are very much a physician or surgeon looking at and trying to create whatever they are doing in the right space or angle, and I think with imaging technology and the Mako, it can be a homerun every time instead of most of the time,” he said.

Anderson, who now considers herself an advocate for the robotic knee replacement, said the outcome from her own operation was an absolute success, and said she would work with any potential patient nervous at the prospect of going under the robotic knife.

“It’s just incredible,” she said. “I was so surprised because I was ready to do that three month thing, and not to not have to do that is such a gift. Not to have that deep knee pain, that bone pain, is amazing.”

Surgeons vs. Chefs 2015

Surgeons from Tucson Orthopaedic Institute joined Tucson Medical Center and Embassy Suites Tucson – Paloma Village for their 6th annual ‘Surgeons vs. Chefs’ Pumpkin Carving Contest to raise money for TMC for Children, Children’s Miracle Network.

Surgeons and chefs from local restaurants carved pumpkins in front of 200 attendees.

The night’s proceeds totaled over $6,800 from raffles and pumpkin auctions!

Attendees also voted for their favorite pumpkins in the following categories: Best Overall Pumpkin, Best Overall Surgeon, Best Overall Chef, Most Creative Pumpkin, Ugliest Pumpkin, and Scariest Pumpkin.

Check out how all the participating physicians carved their pumpkins and see who won each category.

 

  A. Mark Braunstein, MD Baby and the Giant Pumpkin
Stephen L. Curtin, MD
*BEST Overall Surgeon
Scary Pumpkin Shell
Ali H. Dalal, MD Dia de los Muertos & Howling Wolf
Joel R. Goode, MD
*UGLIEST PUMPKIN
 “WiFi is Down’ & Candy Corn Face
Stephen E. Hanks, MD Frankenstein & Ninja Turtle
Chris G. Stevens, MD
*MOST CREATIVE
Hippie

 

The additional winning pumpkins were voted for by attendees. The remaining winners by category are: 

Best Overall Chef: Dominic Jones, The Living Room

Scariest: Jan Osipowicz, Hilton El Conquistador

Best Overall Pumpkin: Ken Harvey, Loews Ventana Canyon

U.S. News & World Report Names the TMC Orthopaedic Center Among Best in Knee Replacement

US News & World ReportTucson Medical Center has been recognized as one of the best hospitals for 2015-16 in knee replacement by U.S. News & World Report. The annual U.S. News Best Hospitals rankings, now in their 26th year, recognize hospitals that excel in treating the most challenging patients.

“The TMC Orthopaedic Center and our partners at the Tucson Orthopaedic Institute are proud to announce this important recognition of our world-class orthopaedics program,” said Judy Rich, president and chief executive officer, Tucson Medical Center. “We take pride in our busy joint replacement program, which is staffed by a care team that is best in class. This designation validates that expertise.”

The TMC Orthopaedic Center is a word-class facility dedicated to the needs of the orthopaedic patient and designed with the full continuum of care in mind. The four-story Orthopaedic and Surgical Tower includes 10 state-of-the-art orthopaedic operating rooms that can accommodate both inpatient and outpatient surgeries, and a dedicated 40-bed orthopaedic unit with all private rooms.

“Tucson Orthopaedic Institute collaborates with TMC on clinical and quality initiatives. That commitment has resulted in measurably better care and outcomes for our patients; and they are able to experience an improved quality of life from the orthopaedic care received here,” said Lawrence Housman, M.D., president, Tucson Orthopaedic Institute.

For 2015-16, U.S. News evaluated hospitals in 16 adult specialties and ranked the top 50 in most of the specialties. Less than 3 percent of the nearly 5,000 hospitals that were analyzed for Best Hospitals 2015-16 were nationally ranked in even one specialty.

“A Best Hospital has demonstrated expertise in treating the most challenging patients,” said Ben Harder, chief of health analysis at U.S. News. “A hospital that emerged from our analysis as one of the best has much to be proud of.”

In rankings by state and metro area, U.S. News recognized hospitals that perform nearly at the level of their nationally ranked peers in one or more specialties, as well as hospitals that excel in multiple common procedures and conditions.

U.S. News publishes Best Hospitals to help guide patients who need a high level of care because they face a particularly difficult surgery, a challenging condition or extra risk because of age or multiple health problems. Objective measures such as patient survival and safety data, adequacy of nurse staffing and other data largely determined the rankings in most specialties.

The specialty rankings and data were produced for U.S. News by RTI International, a leading research organization based in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina. U.S. News used the same data, as well as the new Best Hospitals for Common Care ratings, first published in May, to produce the state and metro rankings.

The rankings are freely available at https://health.usnews.com/best-hospitals and will appear in the U.S. News “Best Hospitals 2016” guidebook, available in August from the U.S. News Store.

About Tucson Medical Center

Tucson Medical Center, licensed at more than 600 beds, has been Tucson’s nonprofit community hospital for more than 70 years. In addition to serving as a regional resource for emergency and pediatric care (including Tucson’s first Pediatric Emergency Department), TMC offers top-notch intensive care units for adults, children and newborns. Specialty areas include women’s, maternity, cardiac, orthopaedic, neuroscience, neurologic, pediatric and imaging. TMC, designated as a ‘Most Wired’ hospital, employs a top-level electronic medical record system.

About Tucson Orthopaedic Institute

Tucson Orthopaedic Institute is one of the Southwest’s leading orthopaedic medical practices. With three locations and 50 practitioners, Tucson Ortho provides comprehensive surgical and non-surgical treatment, serving both adults and children. The fellowship-trained physicians at Tucson Orthopaedic Institute’s Centers of Excellence are committed to improving patient care through community education and outreach efforts to promote lifestyles that create strong, healthy bones, joints and muscles.

 

Surgeons vs. Chefs 2014

Surgeons from Tucson Orthopaedic Institute joined Tucson Medical Center and Embassy Suites Tucson – Paloma Village for their 5th annual ‘Surgeons vs. Chefs’ Pumpkin Carving Contest to raise money for TMC for Children, Children’s Miracle Network.

Surgeons and chefs from local restaurants carved pumpkins in front of 200 attendees.

The night’s proceeds totaled over $12,000 from raffles and pumpkin auctions which is the most amount raised in the event’s history!

Attendees also voted for their favorite pumpkins in the following categories: Best Overall Pumpkin, Best Overall Surgeon, Best Overall Chef, Most Creative Pumpkin, Ugliest Pumpkin, and Scariest Pumpkin.

Check out how all the participating physicians carved their pumpkins and see who won each category.

Surgeons vs. Chefs 2014 - Braunstein

  Surgeons vs. Chefs 2014 - Braunstein (pumpkin)

  A. Mark Braunstein, MD Cookie Monster
 Surgeons vs. Chefs 2014 - Curtin
  Stephen L. Curtin, MD Too Much Candy!
 Surgeons vs. Chefs 2014 - Goode Surgeons vs. Chefs 2014 - Goode (pumpkin)
  Joel R. Goode, MD Warty
Surgeons vs. Chefs 2014 - Hanks Surgeons vs. Chefs 2014 - Hanks (pumpkin)
Stephen E. Hanks, MD Mummy
Surgeons vs. Chefs 2014 - Stevens Surgeon vs. Chef 2014 - Stevens (pumpkin)
  Chris G. Stevens, MD U of A
Surgeons vs. Chefs 2014 - Wild Surgeon vs. Chef 2014 - Wild (pumpkin)
 John J. Wild, Jr., MD

 

The winning pumpkins were voted for by attendees. The six winners by category are:

Best Overall Surgeon: Chris Stevens, MD, Orthopaedic Surgeon
Surgeons vs. Chefs 2014 - Stevens (pumpkin)

Most Creative: Alex and Ezra, Embassy Suites
Surgeons vs. Chefs 2014   Most Creative

Best Overall Chef: Ken Harvey, Loews Ventana Canyon
Surgeons vs. Chefs 2014   Best Chef

Ugliest: Stephen Curtin, MD, Orthopaedic Surgeon

Scariest: Alber Hal, Acacia Fine Foods and Cocktails

Best Overall Pumpkin: Jan Osipowicz, Hilton El Conquistador

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