• Am. J. Med. Sci. · Nov 2015

    Osteoporosis Diagnosis and Management in Long-Term Care Facility.

    • Erwin A Aguilar, Sean D Barry, Charles A Cefalu, Abir Abdo, William P Hudson, James S Campbell, Thomas M Reske, Machaon Bonafede, Kathleen Wilson, Bradley S Stolshek, Carly J Paoli, Nguyet Tran, and Lung-I Cheng.
    • Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center (EAA, SDB, CAC, AA, WPH, JSC, TMR), New Orleans, Louisiana; Truven Health Analytics (MB, KW), Bethesda, Maryland; and Amgen, Inc (BSS, CJP, NT, LIC), Thousand Oaks, California.
    • Am. J. Med. Sci. 2015 Nov 1; 350 (5): 357-63.

    BackgroundContemporary estimates of the prevalence of diagnosed osteoporosis among long-term care facility residents are limited.MethodsThis chart review collected data between April 1, 2012 and August 31, 2013 for adult (age ≥ 30 years) residents of 11 long-term care facilities affiliated with the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in the New Orleans metropolitan area. Data (demographics; comorbidities; osteoporosis diagnosis, risk factors, diagnostic assessments, treatments; fracture history; fall risk; activities of daily living) were summarized. Data for residents with and without diagnosed osteoporosis were compared using χ tests and t tests.ResultsThe study included 746 residents (69% women, mean [SD] age: 76.3 [13.9] years, median length of stay approximately 18.5 months). An osteoporosis diagnosis was recorded for 132 residents (18%), 30% of whom received a pharmacologic osteoporosis therapy. Fewer than 2% of residents had bone mineral density assessments; 10% had previous fracture. Calcium and vitamin D use was more prevalent in residents with diagnosed osteoporosis compared with other residents (calcium: 49% versus 12%, vitamin D: 52% versus 28%; both P < 0.001). Over half (304/545) of assessed residents had a high fall risk. Activities of daily living were similarly limited regardless of osteoporosis status.ConclusionsThe prevalence of diagnosed osteoporosis was higher than previously reported for long-term care residents, but lower than epidemiologic estimates of osteoporosis prevalence for the noninstitutional U.S.PopulationIn our sample, osteoporosis diagnostic testing was rare and treatment rates were low. Our results suggest that osteoporosis may be underdiagnosed and undertreated in long-term care settings.

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