Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Friday, October 18 2019 - 08:05
AsiaNet
IOF: A Fracture Every 3 Seconds Worldwide - That's Osteoporosis
GENEVA, Oct. 18, 2019 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

Marine fractured her spine while bending to help her disabled mother. Lo Lan 
broke her hip after tripping over a loose carpet in her home. 

Both women have something in common. They were unaware that they had 
osteoporosis, the disorder which causes bones to become weak and as fragile as 
glass. People with osteoporosis can fracture a bone even after the most minor 
fall from standing height, or from simply sneezing, or bending to tie a 
shoelace.

Worldwide, one in three women and one in five men aged 50 or over will sustain 
an osteoporosis-related fracture. Approximately 200 million people are 
affected, resulting in a fracture every 3 seconds. 

On World Osteoporosis Day, October 20, the International Osteoporosis 
Foundation (IOF), together with its 250 member organizations worldwide, urge 
all older adults to be aware of osteoporosis risk factors and to consult their 
doctors if they are at risk. 

Although there are many factors which can point to possible underlying 
osteoporosis, among the most common are: a broken bone after age 50 following a 
low-trauma fall; height loss of more than 4 cm (ca 1.5 inches); long-term use 
of glucocorticoids and other bone damaging medications; being frail and 
underweight; and parental history of osteoporosis or hip fracture. A quick and 
easy way to alert oneself to possible risk is with the new online IOF 
Osteoporosis Risk Check [http://riskcheck.iofbonehealth.org/].

A fracture in one's senior years can be life-changing. Acute pain, lengthy 
rehabilitation, long-term disability, dependence on caregivers, and loss of 
quality of life are all too common. Hip fractures can be life-threatening and 
loss of function and independence among survivors is profound, with 40% unable 
to walk independently and 60% requiring assistance a year later. Because of 
these losses, 33% are totally dependent or in a nursing home in the year 
following a hip fracture.

IOF President Professor Cyrus Cooper, states: 

"All adults must make their bone health a priority. Maintaining strong bones 
and muscles is the key to an active, mobile future at older age. If you're at 
risk, don't hesitate to ask your doctor for testing and an appropriate 
treatment strategy if needed. Today, there is a wide range of effective 
osteoporosis treatments which have been shown to reduce the risk of hip 
fractures by up to 40% and spine fractures by 30-70%." 

IOF also calls on health authorities to prioritize bone health and thereby 
reduce the costly human and economic burden of fragility fractures in their 
countries. 

Professor Cooper adds: "As experts in the field we join our patient advocates 
in urging global action. A pervasive treatment gap is leaving even the most 
high-risk patients unprotected against fractures. An individual who has already 
had one fragility fracture is highly vulnerable to further fractures, with a 
five times greater risk of another fracture within the first year. Yet 
approximately 80% of these patients are neither identified nor treated for the 
underlying cause, osteoporosis." 

A key strategy to addressing the treatment gap and the global fragility 
fracture crisis is the implementation of Fracture Liaison Services in all 
hospitals which see fracture patients. Such coordinated, multi-disciplinary 
services improve patient care and help reduce secondary fractures – ultimately 
decreasing enormous fracture-related healthcare costs around the world.

About World Osteoporosis Day (WOD):

Marked annual on October 20, the campaign calls for global action to fight 
osteoporosis and related fractures worldwide. www.worldosteoporosisday.org

WOD Official Partners: Sunsweet, Takeda, Medtronic

About IOF:

The International Osteoporosis Foundation is the world's largest 
non-governmental organization dedicated to bone health and osteoporosis 
prevention. @iofbonehealth, www.iofbonehealth.org

Infographic - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1005044/IOF_risks_Infographic.jpg 
Photo - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1005045/IOF_osteoporotic_bone_changes.jpg

Media Contact: L. Misteli, info@iofbonehealth.org, +41-22-994-0100 

Source: The International Osteoporosis Foundation (IOF)
Translations

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