• J Gen Intern Med · Sep 2007

    Comparative Study

    Racial and socioeconomic disparities in bone density testing before and after hip fracture.

    • Joan M Neuner, Xu Zhang, Rodney Sparapani, Purushottam W Laud, and Ann B Nattinger.
    • Department of Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA. jneuner@mcw.edu
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2007 Sep 1; 22 (9): 123912451239-45.

    BackgroundRacial and socioeconomic disparities have been identified in osteoporosis screening.ObjectiveTo determine whether racial and socioeconomic disparities in osteoporosis screening diminish after hip fracture.DesignRetrospective cohort study of female Medicare patients.SettingEntire states of Illinois, New York, and Florida.ParticipantsFemale Medicare recipients aged 65-89 years old with hip fractures between January 2001 and June 2003.MeasurementsDifferences in bone density testing by race/ethnicity and zip-code level socioeconomic characteristics during the 2-year period preceding and the 6-month period following a hip fracture.ResultsAmong all 35,681 women with hip fractures, 20.7% underwent bone mineral density testing in the 2 years prior to fracture and another 6.2% underwent testing in the 6 months after fracture. In a logistic regression model adjusted for age, state, and comorbidity, women of black race were about half as likely (RR 0.52 [0.43, 0.62]) and Hispanic women about 2/3 as likely (RR 0.66 [0.54, 0.80]) as white women to undergo testing before their fracture. They remained less likely (RR 0.66 [0.50, 0.88] and 0.58 [0.39, 0.87], respectively) to undergo testing after fracture. In contrast, women residing in zip codes in the lowest tertile of income and education were less likely than those in higher-income and educational tertiles to undergo testing before fracture, but were no less likely to undergo testing in the 6 months after fracture.ConclusionsRacial, but not socioeconomic, differences in osteoporosis evaluation continued to occur even after Medicare patients had demonstrated their propensity to fracture. Future interventions may need to target racial/ethnic and socioeconomic disparities differently.

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