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Journal Article

Citation

Neuner JM, Zhang X, Sparapani R, Laud PW, Nattinger AB. J. Gen. Intern Med. 2007; 22(9): 1239-1245.

Affiliation

Department of Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA. jneuner@mcw.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s11606-007-0217-1

PMID

11146273

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Racial and socioeconomic disparities have been identified in osteoporosis screening. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether racial and socioeconomic disparities in osteoporosis screening diminish after hip fracture. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study of female Medicare patients. SETTING: Entire states of Illinois, New York, and Florida. PARTICIPANTS: Female Medicare recipients aged 65-89 years old with hip fractures between January 2001 and June 2003. MEASUREMENTS: Differences 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. RESULTS: Among 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. CONCLUSIONS: Racial, 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.


Language: en

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