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Journal Article

Citation

Berecki-Gisolf J, McClure RJ, Seubsman SA, Sleigh A. BMJ Open 2012; 2(4): ePub.

Affiliation

Monash Injury Research Institute, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1136/bmjopen-2012-001000

PMID

22923625

PMCID

PMC3433778

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To provide estimates of fracture incidence among young adults in Thailand.

DESIGN: Cross-sectional analysis of a large national cohort. SETTING: Thailand. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 60 569 study participants residing nationwide responded to the 2009 follow-up survey; 55% were women and median age was 34 years (range 19-92). OUTCOME MEASURES: Self-reported lifetime fractures, along with age at fracture. Fracture incidence rates per person-year were then compared using lifetime fracture reports, and again selecting only fractures reported for the last year. Incidence rates were compared by age and sex.

RESULTS: 18 010 lifetime fractures were reported; 11 645(65%) by men. Lifetime fracture prevalence was 30% for men and 15% for women. Lifetime incidence per 10 000 person-years was 83; analysing only fractures from the last year yielded a corresponding incidence rate of 187. For ages 21-30, fractures per 10 000 person-years were more common among men than women (283 (95% CI 244 to 326) and 150 (130 to 173), respectively); with increasing age, rates decreased among men and increased among women (for ages 51-60, 97 (58 to 151) and 286 (189 to 417), respectively).

CONCLUSIONS: Large-scale surveys provide a feasible method for establishing relative fracture incidence among informative subgroups in a population. Limiting analyses to fractures reported to have occurred recently minimises bias due to poor recall. The pattern of self-reported fracture incidence among Thais aged 20-60 was similar to that reported for Western countries: high falling rates in young men and high rising rates in older women.


Language: en

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