04
Sep 2025
Want to Help Bring About Better Hospital Care for Hip Fracture Patients?
Published in General on September 04, 2025
 
                                                            Want to Help Bring About Better Hospital Care for Hip Fracture Patients?
Are you interested in improving the hospital care provided to older people who suffer hip fractures? The Australian and New Zealand Hip Fracture Registry (ANZHFR) values the voices of those with lived experience—patients, carers, family members—as essential partners in this effort.
If you—or someone you know—has broken a hip, your insights are especially important. In this context, a “consumer” refers to the person who experienced the fracture, or a family member or carer, but can also include older people generally interested in helping improve care for their peers. The Registry makes it a priority to include consumer participation in all facets of its work: understanding what matters, co-designing projects, and hearing directly about experiences of hip fracture care.
Each year in Australia, nearly 19,000 people suffer hip fractures; in New Zealand, about 4,000 do. This kind of injury carries significant personal, social, and health system costs. Thankfully, many stakeholders in both countries are collaborating to improve outcomes for older adults with hip fractures. One of the tools being used is the Hip Fracture Clinical Care Standard, developed by the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Healthcare. This standard lays out national guidelines for what optimal hip fracture care should look like. The ANZHFR collects hospital data to see how care measures up against those standards, enabling audits, trend-analysis, advocacy, and ultimately helping patients recover better.
Hospital Stays and Why They Matter
One of the critical aspects of hip fracture care is the hospital stay. The time spent in hospital not only impacts medical recovery—such as how quickly surgery can be performed, how rehabilitation begins, and complications are managed—but also has a strong effect on patients’ mobility, psychological well-being, and risk of further problems (like infections, loss of strength, or pressure injuries). Delays in hospital discharge can lead to longer immobilisation, which in older adults often means more muscle loss and a harder recovery. By collecting and reviewing data from hospitals, ANZHFR can identify variations in length of stay, determine what hospital practices help reduce unnecessary delays, and share best practices. These improvements in hospital stay management are key to helping patients not just survive hip fractures but regain independence and quality of life.
What is ANZHFR and How You Can Help
The ANZHFR is a clinical quality registry managed by health professionals and experts in hip fracture care. It collects data on the hospital care of older people who suffer hip fractures, comparing what happens at different hospitals with the national Clinical Care Standard. The Registry’s data allows hospitals to see how they perform, helps identify areas for improvement, tracks national trends, and lets consumers and clinicians push for better care.
Consumers: What You Do and How to Get Involved
Consumers bring valuable perspectives. Some want to ease the journey for others who break their hip; others want to share what they’ve learned. Their input helps shape research questions, improve educational materials for patients and families, and influence how hospitals deliver care.
If this sounds like something you’d like to contribute to, there are many ways to take part—with short-term or longer-term involvement, online or in person. Consumer representatives are remunerated for their time.
If you are interested, you can fill out an Expression of Interest survey via ANZHFR, or contact the Registry’s Consumer Engagement Lead by email. Your experience and voice could make a real difference.
 
                                                                                     
                                                                                     
                                                                                     
                                                                                     
                                                                                     
                                                                                     
                                                                                     
                                                                                    ![“Surprise Noises Can Feel Like Pain”: New Airport Rule Eases Travel for Autistic Passengers Emma Beardsley once dreaded going through airport security. “I used to panic every time they made me take my headphones off at security,” she recalls. “The noise and the unpredictability can be overwhelming.” Now, thanks to a new policy allowing noise-cancelling headphones to remain on during security checks, Beardsley says she can “travel more confidently and safely.”
In Australia, one in four people lives with a disability, yet the travel system has often failed to accommodate varied needs. Autism-inclusion advocates at Aspect Autism Friendly have welcomed the government’s updated guidelines that let autistic travellers keep their noise-reducing headphones on during screening, calling it a “major step” toward more accessible air travel.
Dr Tom Tutton, head of Aspect Autism Friendly, emphasises the significance of travel in people’s lives: it connects them with family, supports work and learning, and offers new experiences. But he notes the typical airport environment can be especially intense for autistic travellers:
“Airports are busy, noisy, random and quite confusing places … you’ve got renovations, food courts, blenders, coffee grinders, trolleys clattering … and constant security announcements. It’s really, really overwhelming.”
“What might be an irritation for me is something that would absolutely destroy my colleague [who has autism]. Surprise noises of a certain tone or volume can genuinely be experienced as painful.”
Under the new policy — now published on the Australian Government’s Department of Home Affairs website — passengers who rely on noise-cancelling headphones as a disability support may request to wear them through body scanners. The headphones may undergo secondary inspection instead of being forcibly removed.
Dr Tutton describes this adjustment as small in procedure but huge in impact: it removes a key point of sensory distress at a critical moment in the journey. Aspect Autism Friendly is collaborating with airports to ensure that all security staff are informed of the change.
For many autistic travellers, headphones aren’t just optional — they are essential to navigating loud, unpredictable environments. Until now, being required to remove them during security has caused distress or even deterred travel.
Aspect Autism Friendly also works directly with airports, offering staff training, autism-friendly audits, visual stories, sensory maps, and other accommodations. Their prior collaborations include autism-friendly initiatives with Qantas. Dr Tutton notes:
“Airports have become this big focus for us of trying to make that little bit of travel easier and better.”
He advises people planning trips for travellers with disabilities to consult airport websites ahead of time. Some airports already offer quiet rooms or sensory zones — Adelaide, for instance, provides spaces where travellers can step away from the noise and regroup before boarding.
Beyond helping autistic individuals, Dr Tutton believes that more accessible airports benefit everyone. “These supports help lots of other people too,” he says. “When people are more patient, kind and supportive, the benefits flow to everyone. We all prefer environments that are well-structured, sensory-friendly, predictable and easy to navigate.”](https://c3eeedc15c0611d84c18-6d9497f165d09befa49b878e755ba3c4.ssl.cf4.rackcdn.com/photos/blogs/article-1061-1759742013.jpg) 
                                                                                    