Long-term effects of a ten-year osteoporosis intervention program in a Swedish population-A cross-sectional study.

Autor: Grahn Kronhed AC; Rehab Väst, Vadstena, Primary Health Care Centre, Local Health Care Services in the West of Östergötland, Sweden; Social Medicine and Public Health Science, Division of Community Medicine, Department of Medical and Health Sciences, Linköping University., Salminen H; Division of Family Medicine, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Preventive medicine reports [Prev Med Rep] 2017 Jan 02; Vol. 5, pp. 295-300. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Jan 02 (Print Publication: 2017).
DOI: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2016.12.024
Abstrakt: The aim of the study was to explore long-term effects seven years after the completion of a ten-year community-based osteoporosis intervention program in Vadstena, Sweden. The association between calcaneal bone mineral density and several life style factors, and the impact of risk factors for sustaining a fracture after the age of 50 were also studied. Previous participants in the intervention group, and matched subjects were invited to calcaneal bone mass measurement by a portable device including the dual X-ray and laser (DXL) technology by Calscan, and to complete a questionnaire in 2006. A total of 417 persons (63% of those invited) in the intervention (I) group, and 120 persons (47% of those invited) in the control (C) group participated. Mean age was 63 years (37-94 years). There was somewhat more knowledge of osteoporosis in the I-group (M = 18) than in the C-group (M = 17) ( p  < 0.05), and more use of shoe/cane spikes in elderly women in the I-group (67%) than in the C-group (40.5%). The fully adjusted model of logistic regression showed that participants with an osteoporotic DXL T-score (≤- 2.5) had a 3-fold increased risk (95%CI 1.48-6.89) of having a history of a self-reported fracture after the age of fifty compared to women with a calcaneal T-score >- 2.5. The long-term effects of a ten-year, community-based, osteoporosis intervention program on knowledge and behavior were modest seven years after its completion.
Databáze: MEDLINE