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Post-discharge healthcare utilization and costs in musculoskeletal surgery patients: A cohort study in Korea

by Boyoung Jeon, Boyoung Jung, Yun-Kyung Song

Background

Musculoskeletal surgery imposes extended recovery periods and significant financial burdens that can undermine individual and system-level health security. Patients undergoing musculoskeletal surgery often face prolonged recovery and substantial post-discharge costs, yet longitudinal evidence on their healthcare use remains limited.

Methods

This study quantified two-year post-discharge utilization and identified predictors of high expenditure among Korean musculoskeletal surgery patients. A retrospective cohort was constructed from the 2019–2021 Korea Health Panel. Adults (n = 182) hospitalized for spinal, knee, shoulder or other musculoskeletal disorders between July 2019 and June 2020 were followed for 24 months. Outcomes were total healthcare expenditure (log-transformed) and in the top 25% cost group (“high-expenditure”) in the second post-discharge year.

Results

Among 182 adults hospitalized for musculoskeletal surgery, first-year post-discharge spending averaged US $848 but fell to US $487 in the second year. Readmission fell from 19.2% to 7.1%, and Western-medicine outpatient visits declined from 18.3 ± 25.9 to 13.6 ± 22.9 per person. By contrast, Traditional Korean Medicine (TKM) visits rose from 2.3 ± 6.5 to 3.3 ± 10.0. In multivariable models, metropolitan residence, obesity, additional chronic conditions, and heavier first-year inpatient and outpatient use independently predicted higher second-year costs. Lower household income was associated with lower spending. Index diagnoses were pivotal: spinal disorders and shoulder disorders markedly increased the odds of falling into the top-cost quartile. Among the first-year TKM, frequent chuna/manual therapy sessions were marginally associated with higher costs, suggesting these rehabilitative modalities may serve as proxies for underlying health complexity during the stabilization phase.

Conclusions

Spinal and shoulder disorders, metropolitan residence, obesity, multimorbidity, heavy inpatient and outpatient use during the first post-discharge year, and frequent TKM sessions, albeit marginally, jointly predicted the highest second-year expenditures. These findings highlight the value of early risk stratification and tightly coordinated Western-and-traditional care pathways that facilitate the shift from structural repair to functional restoration. From a policy perspective, these results suggest the need for integrated post-discharge care models and targeted financial support strategies to reduce avoidable costs and enhance equity in musculoskeletal rehabilitation.

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