
@article{ref1,
title="Hip fractures among the elderly in a Swedish urban setting: different perspectives on the significance of country of birth",
journal="Scandinavian journal of public health",
year="2007",
author="Furugren, Lena and Laflamme, Lucie",
volume="35",
number="1",
pages="11-16",
abstract="OBJECTIVES: The study investigates the significance of country of birth for hip fractures among the elderly in a Swedish urban setting. DESIGN: Cross-sectional register-based study. METHODS: All people aged 65 or above hospitalized because of hip fracture in Stockholm County over the years 1993-95 were identified in the County's Hospital Discharge Register. Information was obtained from Sweden's National Population Register on the countries of birth of the people affected (reference year: 1994). The foreign-born were grouped in two ways: according to the geographic location of their country of birth, and to the level of development of that country (as measured by the UN's Human Development Index). Age-standardized odds ratios were computed for men and women separately, with the Swedish-born elderly as reference group. RESULTS: Many of the foreign-born groups registered significantly lower odds of hip fracture than their Swedish-born counterparts, regardless of whether countries of birth were grouped geographically or according to level of development. This applied to both men and women. CONCLUSIONS: As a whole, the Swedish elderly population has one of the highest prevalences of hip fracture in the world. When country of origin is accounted for, the foreign-born elderly are significantly less vulnerable than native Swedes. This contrasts remarkably with other health outcomes.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1403-4948",
doi="10.1080/14034940600733925",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14034940600733925"
}