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The Gap Between a Great Care Pathway and a Great Outcome? It's Almost Never the Protocol.

Every orthopedic surgeon has seen it. A well-designed Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) protocol, backed by solid evidence, carefully introduced at a departmental meeting and six months later, adherence has drifted; outcomes are inconsistent, and the enthusiasm that launched the initiative has quietly faded. The problem is rarely science. Science is settled.

ERAS image

What Two Decades of Evidence Actually Tell Us

What Henrik Kehlet helped establish early on is now well supported: multimodal perioperative care can reduce surgical stress, and the evidence for optimized orthopedic pathways is now among the strongest in elective surgery.

The numbers are no longer surprising, but they remain striking.

Across Europe, the direction of travel is clear. Hospitals that have introduced structured Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) pathways for primary hip and knee arthroplasty are generally seeing patients leave hospital around one to three days earlier1,2,3. They are also reporting slightly fewer readmissions, lower rates of significant postoperative complications, and fewer infections than centres following more traditional pathways1,. And the benefit is not only clinical. Recent work from the UK and Italy suggests that when recovery pathways are well organised, they can also reduce costs, both for each individual case and across the hospital as a whole1,3,.

These are not incremental improvements. They represent a fundamental shift in what perioperative care can deliver for patients, hospitals, and surgical teams.

So why does the gap between evidence and practice remain so wide?

The Real Challenge Has Never Been the Protocol

Here is what the evidence consistently shows: the single greatest predictor of pathway success is not the clinical content of the protocol. It is the degree of multidisciplinary alignment around it.

Surgeon champions, anesthesia engagement, nursing leadership, and executive sponsorship each play a distinct and non-substitutable role. When one is missing, the pathway bends. When several are missing, it breaks.

Professional silos, resistance to standardization, and competing institutional priorities continue to undermine even well-resourced programs. The "cookbook medicine" objection, familiar to anyone who has tried to introduce protocol-driven care, remains one of the most persistent barriers to adoption.

The implication is uncomfortable but important: a well-designed protocol applied inconsistently produces inconsistent outcomes. The human infrastructure around the pathway matters as much as its clinical content.

90% of Recovery Happens Outside Your Hospital

Perhaps the most significant shift in orthopedic care over the past decade is not what happens in the operating room, it is what happens after discharge.

Evidence now suggests that approximately 90% of the recovery journey occurs outside hospital settings. Same-day and next-day discharge is no longer a niche pathway for carefully selected low-risk patients. It is rapidly becoming the default for primary hip and knee arthroplasty across high-performing institutions.

This changes the nature of the surgeon's role in a fundamental way.

Robust pre-operative patient education, validated discharge criteria, and structured remote follow-up are no longer optional enhancements to a care pathway. They are its functional backbone. Digital platforms, offering remote symptom monitoring, patient-reported outcome collection, and AI-powered early warning systems, are demonstrating 50-70% reductions in in-person physiotherapy visits and earlier detection of complications.

But technology adoption is not frictionless. Age-related digital literacy gaps, Electronic Health Record (EHR) integration complexity, and data privacy requirements mean that digital pathways cannot yet be applied uniformly. Patient selection for outpatient arthroplasty remains a critical bottleneck, with validated screening tools still lacking and surgeon comfort with rapid discharge varying considerably across institutions.

The Implementation Gap Is the Problem Worth Solving

The evidence for orthopedic care pathway optimization is mature, consistent, and clinically meaningful. What is less mature is our collective ability to implement these pathways reliably, across diverse surgical environments, patient populations, and institutional contexts.

The next frontier is not discovering whether Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) works. It is understanding how to make it work sustainably, in community hospitals with limited resources, in departments without a dedicated pathway coordinator, in patient populations where digital engagement is not straightforward.

That requires something the literature is only beginning to address seriously: a science of implementation, not just a science of outcomes.

Governance structures, regular multidisciplinary review, defined accountability across the care continuum, and protected time for training and refinement are not administrative overhead. They are, in the truest sense, clinical infrastructure.

The Question Worth Asking in Your Department This Week

The data tells us what is possible. The harder conversation is about what is actually happening: in your institution, in your team, in your practice. Join the conversation and share your thoughts in the comments!

  • What is the single greatest barrier to consistent pathway adherence in your department: clinical, organizational, or technological?

  • As same-day discharge becomes the default for appropriate patients, how are you managing the transition of monitoring responsibility from the hospital to the home?

  • Beyond the length of stay, what metrics are you using to measure whether your care pathway is actually delivering better outcomes for patients?

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