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Comparative Study Historical Article
Changing epidemiology of adult fractures in Scotland.
- Charles M Court-Brown, Leela Biant, Kate E Bugler, and Margaret M McQueen.
- Professor of Orthopaedic Trauma, University of Edinburgh, UK.
- Scot Med J. 2014 Feb 1; 59 (1): 30-4.
BackgroundFracture epidemiology in adults is changing but there is very little information about the rate of change or whether the change affects males and females equally.MethodsWe have compared fracture incidence in two similar populations 50-60 years apart. A study of fractures in Dundee, Scotland and Oxford, England, in 1954-1958, was compared with a similar cohort of fractures in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 2010-2011. Fracture incidence in patients >35 years was recorded in both time periods.ResultsThe incidence of fractures increased by 50% between the two time periods, although the increase in males was only 5% compared with 85% in females. The spectrum of fractures has changed considerably, and there has been an increase in the incidence of both fragility and non-fragility fractures. Analysis showed an increased incidence of fall-related fractures in all age groups in both males and females.InterpretationThere has been a substantial change in the incidence of fractures in the last 50-60 years. These have been caused by greater longevity and by considerable social and economic changes.
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