Significance of osteoporosis: A growing international health care problem
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Calcified Tissue International
- Vol. 49 (S1) , S5-S7
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02555078
Abstract
The international incidences of osteoporosis and the hip fracture syndrome are increasing at alarming rates. The estimated increases in rates of fracture over the next decade may also prove to be conservative, because of progressive increases in numbers of elderly people who will fall because of muscular degeneration, failing vision, postural hypotension, and loss of cognitive function resulting from the ever-increasing abuse of mixtures of drugs. Changing patterns of hip fracture care, including extended use of hospital beds and of rehabilitation and nursing-home beds could lead to substantial and escalating annual costs in national health care budgets. Such a budget currently approximates 10 billion dollars in the United States alone!Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Changes in the Incidence of Fracture of the Upper End of the Humerus During a 30-Year PeriodPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1988
- Age- and Sex-specific Incidence of Femoral Neck and Trochanteric Fractures An Analysis Based on 20,538 Fractures in Stockholm County, Sweden, 1972- 1981Published by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1987
- Prevention of OsteoporosisPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1987
- Epidemiology of Trochanteric Fractures of the Femur in Alicante, Spain, 1974-1982Published by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1987
- Involutional OsteoporosisNew England Journal of Medicine, 1986
- Prevalence of bone demineralization in the United StatesBone, 1985
- Epidemiology of Hip Fractures in G??teborg, Sweden, 1940???1983Published by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1984
- Age and sex patterns of hip fracture-changes in 30 yearsActa Orthopaedica, 1984
- THE INCREASING INCIDENCE OF FRACTURES OF THE PROXIMAL FEMUR: AN ORTHOPAEDIC EPIDEMICThe Lancet, 1983
- Costs of Treatment of hip Fractures:A Calculation of the Consumption of the Resources of Hospitals and Rehabilitation InstitutionsActa Orthopaedica, 1979