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Coordinator-based systems for secondary prevention in fragility fracture patients

Coordinator-based systems for secondary prevention in fragility fracture patients
Coordinator-based systems for secondary prevention in fragility fracture patients
The underlying causes of incident fractures—bone fragility and the tendency to fall—remain under-diagnosed and under-treated. This care gap in secondary prevention must be addressed to minimise both the debilitating consequences of subsequent fractures for patients and the associated economic burden to healthcare systems. Clinical systems aimed at ensuring appropriate management of patients following fracture have been developed around the world. A systematic review of the literature showed that 65% of systems reported include a dedicated coordinator who acts as the link between the orthopaedic team, the osteoporosis and falls services, the patient and the primary care physician. Coordinator-based systems facilitate bone mineral density testing, osteoporosis education and care in patients following a fragility fracture and have been shown to be cost-saving. Other success factors included a fracture registry and a database to monitor the care provided to the fracture patient. Implementation of such a system requires an audit of existing arrangements, creation of a network of healthcare professionals with clearly defined roles and the identification of a ‘medical champion’ to lead the project. A business case is needed to acquire the necessary funding. Incremental, achievable targets should be identified. Clinical pathways should be supported by evidence-based recommendations from national or regional guidelines. Endorsement of the proposed model within national healthcare policies and advocacy programmes can achieve alignment of the objectives of policy makers, professionals and patients. Successful transformation of care relies upon consensus amongst all participants in the multi-disciplinary team that cares for fragility fracture patients.
clinical systems, fls, fracture prevention, iof, osteoporosis, osteoporotic fracture
0937-941X
2051-2065
Marsh, D.
7c06e90c-dfd8-4717-8907-b304f8773d36
Akesson, K.
58e11cb7-97ac-4405-8f13-834d7be07564
Beaton, D.E.
54a6ea5f-cbfb-4f11-b5b7-930940397a13
Bogoch, E.R.
e5eb08f6-460a-44a6-bc2c-71fe78c601de
Boonen, S.
19c70ece-493f-4b7c-9bf9-5e4a4a887ba4
Brandi, M.L.
4147f967-9c22-494d-ae35-c8141161413d
McLellan, A.R.
073bf5de-f62d-4022-a874-3cdd31e96c91
Mitchell, P.J.
a7608230-d309-4a4c-bc43-dfc89694fe9f
Sale, J.E.
6b05c24d-c287-4fc9-bf5a-5306051251d3
Wahl, D.A.
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Cooper, C.
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Goldhahn, J.
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Lewiecki, E.M.
72c22a62-a9bc-4e25-85d0-2ba864728a01
Lyritis, G.
4fa5b700-a006-4e8c-9e7a-9e8e95256de3
Obrant, K.
b2eae353-60c4-49df-9f4e-f97d389510b7
Silverman, S.
dfe0f214-17ef-41de-b403-7e2b3105f178
Siris, E.
34f296f5-0065-4bdd-9656-28db3a86b331
Stenmark, J.
32e7f186-7e38-4f03-9e95-3797e51edc15
Marsh, D.
7c06e90c-dfd8-4717-8907-b304f8773d36
Akesson, K.
58e11cb7-97ac-4405-8f13-834d7be07564
Beaton, D.E.
54a6ea5f-cbfb-4f11-b5b7-930940397a13
Bogoch, E.R.
e5eb08f6-460a-44a6-bc2c-71fe78c601de
Boonen, S.
19c70ece-493f-4b7c-9bf9-5e4a4a887ba4
Brandi, M.L.
4147f967-9c22-494d-ae35-c8141161413d
McLellan, A.R.
073bf5de-f62d-4022-a874-3cdd31e96c91
Mitchell, P.J.
a7608230-d309-4a4c-bc43-dfc89694fe9f
Sale, J.E.
6b05c24d-c287-4fc9-bf5a-5306051251d3
Wahl, D.A.
32cf9afd-a852-4818-aad2-e6fb29443059
Cooper, C.
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Goldhahn, J.
5979a675-5356-4498-a53f-2338be1d6f62
Lewiecki, E.M.
72c22a62-a9bc-4e25-85d0-2ba864728a01
Lyritis, G.
4fa5b700-a006-4e8c-9e7a-9e8e95256de3
Obrant, K.
b2eae353-60c4-49df-9f4e-f97d389510b7
Silverman, S.
dfe0f214-17ef-41de-b403-7e2b3105f178
Siris, E.
34f296f5-0065-4bdd-9656-28db3a86b331
Stenmark, J.
32e7f186-7e38-4f03-9e95-3797e51edc15

Marsh, D., Akesson, K., Beaton, D.E., Bogoch, E.R., Boonen, S., Brandi, M.L., McLellan, A.R., Mitchell, P.J., Sale, J.E., Wahl, D.A., Cooper, C., Goldhahn, J., Lewiecki, E.M., Lyritis, G., Obrant, K., Silverman, S., Siris, E. and Stenmark, J. (2011) Coordinator-based systems for secondary prevention in fragility fracture patients. Osteoporosis International, 22 (7), 2051-2065. (doi:10.1007/s00198-011-1642-x). (PMID:21607807)

Record type: Article

Abstract

The underlying causes of incident fractures—bone fragility and the tendency to fall—remain under-diagnosed and under-treated. This care gap in secondary prevention must be addressed to minimise both the debilitating consequences of subsequent fractures for patients and the associated economic burden to healthcare systems. Clinical systems aimed at ensuring appropriate management of patients following fracture have been developed around the world. A systematic review of the literature showed that 65% of systems reported include a dedicated coordinator who acts as the link between the orthopaedic team, the osteoporosis and falls services, the patient and the primary care physician. Coordinator-based systems facilitate bone mineral density testing, osteoporosis education and care in patients following a fragility fracture and have been shown to be cost-saving. Other success factors included a fracture registry and a database to monitor the care provided to the fracture patient. Implementation of such a system requires an audit of existing arrangements, creation of a network of healthcare professionals with clearly defined roles and the identification of a ‘medical champion’ to lead the project. A business case is needed to acquire the necessary funding. Incremental, achievable targets should be identified. Clinical pathways should be supported by evidence-based recommendations from national or regional guidelines. Endorsement of the proposed model within national healthcare policies and advocacy programmes can achieve alignment of the objectives of policy makers, professionals and patients. Successful transformation of care relies upon consensus amongst all participants in the multi-disciplinary team that cares for fragility fracture patients.

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More information

Published date: 24 May 2011
Keywords: clinical systems, fls, fracture prevention, iof, osteoporosis, osteoporotic fracture

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 194339
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/194339
ISSN: 0937-941X
PURE UUID: d82db56b-8e46-4e20-a7fb-60d4abbdf8c5
ORCID for C. Cooper: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3510-0709

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 27 Jul 2011 10:16
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:45

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Contributors

Author: D. Marsh
Author: K. Akesson
Author: D.E. Beaton
Author: E.R. Bogoch
Author: S. Boonen
Author: M.L. Brandi
Author: A.R. McLellan
Author: P.J. Mitchell
Author: J.E. Sale
Author: D.A. Wahl
Author: C. Cooper ORCID iD
Author: J. Goldhahn
Author: E.M. Lewiecki
Author: G. Lyritis
Author: K. Obrant
Author: S. Silverman
Author: E. Siris
Author: J. Stenmark

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