How long of repossession for hip replacement and can I remain a police officer afterwards?
Answers:
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I have have both of my hips replaced in separate surgeries several months apart. I can describe to you my own experience surrounded by the hope that you can apply some of it to your own situation. Both times I was within the hospital 4 days + surgery day. I had slightly different recouping rates between the two surgeries. I seemed to rest very suddenly with my second hip, not so immediately with the first. Part of this difference may own been due to the reality that I still had a impossible hip after surgery #1 and this slowed me down. Another factor may have be that by the time I had hip #2 done, I have "been there" and "done that" and know more what to expect, what worked for me and what didn't. I do know that I was up and busy a lot closer with hip #2, took abundantly less dull pain meds, had no swelling of the leg because I be up and walking around sooner. I guess it takes one surgery to revise the drill.
I was competent to drive by about week 5 respectively time. I was competent to ditch all walking aids (canes, etc.) by 6-8 weeks after surgery #2. I have PT 2-3 times a week after each surgery until roughly week 7 post-op. I had movement and positional restrictions imposed for several months (I don't remember how long the surgeon said I wasn't supposed to bend at the hip ancient 90 degrees.) The personality of the surgical approach and the preference of your surgeon will determine what, if any restrictions you are to follow and how long you are supposed to follow them. It's be several years since my surgeries but I still observe one of the restrictions: I avoid bending my hips historic 90 degrees at equal time as I internally rotate my leg. This is a permanent restriction for me. So that ability that I can now put on sox, tie shoes, and pick up that $20 bill from the floor!
In the interest of increasing the chance that my fake joint might outlive me, I also avoid high-impact activities (singles tennis, running, basketball, etc.) in favor of walking, biking, egg-shaped trainers, etc.
A suggestion: discuss the nature of your commission with your surgeon and grasp his/her take on if and when you'd be feasible to be able to step back to work. I consider that I could own gone back to work at my regular situation at about week 6 of the 2nd surgery. That living allowed me to alternate between sitting, standing and walking and didn't require me to lift or take heavy cargo so it would have be an ideal situation (I don't work any more).
IMHO, hip replacement is a humane of miracle in the course that it resores function and relieves pain. I'm so healthy I had mine done. I hope yours turns out as resourcefully and mine did.
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Usually, people do not spend more than 3 to 5 days contained by the hospital after hip replacement surgery. Full recovery from the surgery take about 3 to 6 months, depending on the type of surgery, your overall robustness, and the success of your rehabilitation.According to the site I found, you should avoid running, which could be a problem if you hold to do a yearly run (some places brand you qualify yearly beside the POST physical tests, I don't know if you hold to worry just about that or not), so you might have to switch your duties a touch, but I'm sure you can remain a police officer, if you are willing to work beside the department to find a post that you can physically handle. Maybe you should clutch to your HR department about your concern and see what the option are.
Good luck!
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