Peter
Peter started having pain in his knees around 2002, but was reluctant to have surgery because of the time he’d need off work. He had partial knee replacement surgery in 2014 after he retired and is now considering having his other knee done.
Peter started having pain in his knees around 2002. He was working as a plumber and often kneeling on his knees because of his job. He visited his GP, who prescribed painkillers, and also had cortisone injections in his knees. Peter had several injections over the years but felt that they didn’t help.
Eventually, Peter was advised to have surgery. However, he was reluctant to be off work for the length of time needed to recover from the operation, so decided to wait until retirement. When he did retire, Peter went back to his GP who referred him to a specialist. At the hospital, tests confirmed that Peter had osteoarthritis and was eligible for partial knee replacement surgery. Tests also showed that he had high blood pressure and a heart murmur. Peter’s operation was delayed until his blood pressure was reduced, which was done fairly quickly with tablets prescribed by his GP.
Peter had surgery to his left knee and was discharged from hospital the day after the operation. At home, he was in extreme pain. The paracetamol that he had been given did not alleviate the pain. Peter called the hospital and was told that he should also take codeine, which had been prescribed to him by his GP. Peter had not been told this when he was discharged from hospital and felt strongly that he should have been given this information before he left.
At the time of interview, about three weeks after surgery, Peter could walk, go up and down the stairs, drive short distances and was not in much pain, though still needed painkillers. He hoped to go back to work part-time, and was thinking about whether to have his right knee operated on. Peter was concerned that having his other knee done might make it too painful to kneel down and so impossible to work.