Hip Fractures in Older Adults in Ontario, Canada—Monthly Variation, Insights, and Implications

Authors

  • Kristin K Clemens Western University; ICES; Lawson Health Research Institute
  • Alexandra Ouedraogo ICES
  • Mark Speechley Lawson Health Research Institute; Western University
  • Lucie Richard ICES
  • Jenny Thain Western University
  • Salimah Z Shariff ICES

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5770/cgj.22.341

Keywords:

hip fractures, trends, variation, elderly

Abstract

Background

In older adults, hip fractures have been described to peak in cooler months. Seasonal differences in patient vulnerability to fracture and social/behavioural factors might contribute to these trends.

Methods

Using linked health-care databases in Ontario Canada, we examined monthly variation in hip fracture hospitalizations in those > 65 years (2011–2015). We stratified results by age category (66-79, ≥80 years). We then examined for variation in the demographic and comorbidity profiles of patients across the months, and as an index of contributing social/behavioural factors, noted variation in health-care behaviours.

Results

There were 47,971 and 52,088 hospitalizations for hip fracture in those 66–79, and ≥80 years, respectively. There was strong seasonality in fractures in both groups. Peaks occurred in October and December when patients appeared most vulner-able. Rates fell in the summer in those 66-79 years, and in the late winter in those ≥80 years (when health-care utilization also declined). A smaller peak in fractures occurred in May in both groups.

Conclusions

Hip fractures peak in the autumn, early winter, and spring in Canada. A dip in fractures occurs in the late winter in the oldest old. Environmental factors might play a role, but seasonal vulnerability to fracture and winter isolation might also be influential.

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Published

2019-08-30

How to Cite

1.
Clemens KK, Ouedraogo A, Speechley M, Richard L, Thain J, Shariff SZ. Hip Fractures in Older Adults in Ontario, Canada—Monthly Variation, Insights, and Implications. Can Geriatr J [Internet]. 2019 Aug. 30 [cited 2024 Apr. 18];22(3):148-64. Available from: https://cgjonline.ca/index.php/cgj/article/view/341

Issue

Section

Original Research