Age- and sex-specific incidence rates and future projections for hip fractures in Zimbabwe
Age- and sex-specific incidence rates and future projections for hip fractures in Zimbabwe
INTRODUCTION: Population ageing in Africa is increasing healthcare demands. Hip fractures require multidisciplinary care and are considered an indicator condition for age-related health services. We aimed to estimate current hip fracture incidence in Zimbabwe, compare rates against other regional estimates and estimate future fracture numbers.
METHODS: All hip fracture cases in adults aged ≥40 years, presenting to any hospital in Harare over 2 years, were identified. From this, age- and sex-specific hip fracture incidence rates per 100 000 person-years were estimated using 2022 Zimbabwean Census data and compared with South African and Botswanan estimates. Furthermore, using the United Nations population projections, future hip fracture numbers were estimated to 2052 for Zimbabwe.
RESULTS: In 2022, 1 83 312 women and 1 79 212 men aged ≥40 years were living in Harare (14.9% of the city's population). Over 2 years 243 hip fracture cases, 133 (54.7%) female, mean (SD) age 71.2 (15.9) years, were identified. Most presented to public hospitals (202 [83.1%]) and were fragility hip fractures (211 [86.8%]); high-impact trauma (eg, traffic accidents) was more common in younger men. Presentation delays of >2 weeks were common (37.4%). Incidence rates for adults aged ≥40 years in Harare (observed) and Zimbabwe (estimated) were 33.5 and 53.8/100 000 person-years, respectively. Over age 50, rates increased with age, with the highest rates seen in women aged ≥85 years (704/100 000 person-years). Age-standardised hip fracture incidence rates are broadly comparable between Zimbabwe, Botswana and Black South Africans in those aged 40-69 years; thereafter, rates in Zimbabwean women and men exceed those in Botswana and South Africa. Across Zimbabwe, the number of hip fractures occurring annually is expected to increase more than 2.5-fold from 1709 in 2022 to 4414 by 2052.
CONCLUSION: In Zimbabwe, most hip fractures in adults ≥50 years are fragility fractures, consistent with age-associated osteoporosis; incidence rates exceed those previously reported regionally. Demands on already challenged healthcare systems will increase.
Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Forecasting, Hip Fractures/epidemiology, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Sex Distribution, Zimbabwe/epidemiology
Wilson, Hannah
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Manyanga, Tadios
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Burton, Anya
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Mushayavanhu, Prudance
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Chipanga, Joseph
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Hawley, Samuel
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Ward, Kate A
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Graham, Simon
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Masters, James
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Bandason, Tsitsi
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Costa, Matthew L
8876b1b7-7f82-4f17-bd58-e78bb2012003
Ndekwere, Munyaradzi
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Ferrand, Rashida A
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Gregson, Celia L
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27 January 2025
Wilson, Hannah
316ddb2e-6b57-45c7-9183-09520099f5ec
Manyanga, Tadios
ebc7ae29-45f7-4588-902f-61d814a499e4
Burton, Anya
5e9a75d5-c3b9-43f2-8d8e-01b922376f1b
Mushayavanhu, Prudance
29a7c289-3748-4e25-aab5-cf44c8263b8a
Chipanga, Joseph
db3e6475-0578-46f0-94bf-6e776e8fa33d
Hawley, Samuel
36ff44ab-89d7-48f7-aa51-5f44e456fc36
Ward, Kate A
39bd4db1-c948-4e32-930e-7bec8deb54c7
Graham, Simon
2a391d2d-e908-40fc-b618-45d398df517a
Masters, James
ff956e0b-67f7-4af6-87fc-b27ae90de9bf
Bandason, Tsitsi
a50bf201-04b4-4260-aaed-2b049c33a76d
Costa, Matthew L
8876b1b7-7f82-4f17-bd58-e78bb2012003
Ndekwere, Munyaradzi
84336161-6474-48e2-8ad0-94ee734ae872
Ferrand, Rashida A
9441b7cd-4eb5-4665-aa69-357911fd2c87
Gregson, Celia L
9e28df51-89ec-4a1e-88ff-c6010a986e96
Wilson, Hannah, Manyanga, Tadios, Burton, Anya, Mushayavanhu, Prudance, Chipanga, Joseph, Hawley, Samuel, Ward, Kate A, Graham, Simon, Masters, James, Bandason, Tsitsi, Costa, Matthew L, Ndekwere, Munyaradzi, Ferrand, Rashida A and Gregson, Celia L
(2025)
Age- and sex-specific incidence rates and future projections for hip fractures in Zimbabwe.
BMJ Global Health, 10 (1), [e017365].
(doi:10.1136/bmjgh-2024-017365).
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Population ageing in Africa is increasing healthcare demands. Hip fractures require multidisciplinary care and are considered an indicator condition for age-related health services. We aimed to estimate current hip fracture incidence in Zimbabwe, compare rates against other regional estimates and estimate future fracture numbers.
METHODS: All hip fracture cases in adults aged ≥40 years, presenting to any hospital in Harare over 2 years, were identified. From this, age- and sex-specific hip fracture incidence rates per 100 000 person-years were estimated using 2022 Zimbabwean Census data and compared with South African and Botswanan estimates. Furthermore, using the United Nations population projections, future hip fracture numbers were estimated to 2052 for Zimbabwe.
RESULTS: In 2022, 1 83 312 women and 1 79 212 men aged ≥40 years were living in Harare (14.9% of the city's population). Over 2 years 243 hip fracture cases, 133 (54.7%) female, mean (SD) age 71.2 (15.9) years, were identified. Most presented to public hospitals (202 [83.1%]) and were fragility hip fractures (211 [86.8%]); high-impact trauma (eg, traffic accidents) was more common in younger men. Presentation delays of >2 weeks were common (37.4%). Incidence rates for adults aged ≥40 years in Harare (observed) and Zimbabwe (estimated) were 33.5 and 53.8/100 000 person-years, respectively. Over age 50, rates increased with age, with the highest rates seen in women aged ≥85 years (704/100 000 person-years). Age-standardised hip fracture incidence rates are broadly comparable between Zimbabwe, Botswana and Black South Africans in those aged 40-69 years; thereafter, rates in Zimbabwean women and men exceed those in Botswana and South Africa. Across Zimbabwe, the number of hip fractures occurring annually is expected to increase more than 2.5-fold from 1709 in 2022 to 4414 by 2052.
CONCLUSION: In Zimbabwe, most hip fractures in adults ≥50 years are fragility fractures, consistent with age-associated osteoporosis; incidence rates exceed those previously reported regionally. Demands on already challenged healthcare systems will increase.
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Accepted/In Press date: 9 January 2025
Published date: 27 January 2025
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© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2025. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ Group.
Keywords:
Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Forecasting, Hip Fractures/epidemiology, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Sex Distribution, Zimbabwe/epidemiology
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Local EPrints ID: 498562
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498562
ISSN: 2059-7908
PURE UUID: e25ba3b4-185e-4a32-aff1-904b15df20a4
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Date deposited: 20 Feb 2025 18:23
Last modified: 03 Sep 2025 01:48
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Contributors
Author:
Hannah Wilson
Author:
Tadios Manyanga
Author:
Anya Burton
Author:
Prudance Mushayavanhu
Author:
Joseph Chipanga
Author:
Samuel Hawley
Author:
Simon Graham
Author:
James Masters
Author:
Tsitsi Bandason
Author:
Matthew L Costa
Author:
Munyaradzi Ndekwere
Author:
Rashida A Ferrand
Author:
Celia L Gregson
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