Authors
Jacqueline R Center, Tuan V Nguyen, Diane Schneider, Philip N Sambrook, John A Eisman
Publication date
1999/3/13
Journal
The Lancet
Volume
353
Issue
9156
Pages
878-882
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Background
Mortality increases after hip fractures in women and more so in men. Little is known, however, about mortality after other fractures. We investigated the mortality associated with all fracture types in elderly women and men.
Methods
We did a 5-year prospective cohort study in the semi-urban city of Dubbo, Australia, of all residents aged 60 years and older (2413 women and 1898 men). Low-trauma osteoporotic fractures that occurred between 1989 and 1994, confirmed by radiography and personal interview, were classified as proximal femur, vertebral, and groupings of other major and minor fractures. We calculated standardised mortality rates from death certificates for people with fractures compared with the Dubbo population.
Findings
356 women and 137 men had low-trauma fractures. In women and men, mortality was increased in the first year after all major fractures. In women, agestandardised …
Total citations
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