
@article{ref1,
title="Subsequent Fracture in Nursing Home Residents with a Hip Fracture: A Competing Risks Approach",
journal="Journal of the American Geriatrics Society",
year="2008",
author="Berry, Sarah D. and Samelson, Elizabeth J. and Ngo, Long and Bordes, Malynda and Broe, Kerry E. and Kiel, Douglas P.",
volume="56",
number="10",
pages="1887-1892",
abstract="<p><b>OBJECTIVES: </b> To determine the incidence and predictors of subsequent fracture in nursing home residents with a hip fracture, accounting for the competing risk of death.</p> <p><b>DESIGN: </b> Dynamic cohort study.</p> <p><b>SETTING: </b> Hebrew Rehabilitation Center, a 725‐bed, long‐term care facility in Boston, Massachusetts.</p> <p><b>PARTICIPANTS: </b> Long‐term care residents with a surgically repaired hip fracture (1999–2006) followed through June 30, 2007, for the occurrence of subsequent fracture at any skeletal site.</p> <p><b>MEASUREMENTS: </b> Information on age, sex, anatomic location, type of repair, body mass index (BMI), comorbidities, functional status, cognitive status, and medication use were evaluated as potential risk factors for subsequent fracture.</p> <p><b>RESULTS: </b> The study included 184 residents with a baseline hip fracture. Thirty‐nine residents (7 men, 32 women) experienced a subsequent fracture over a median follow‐up of 1.1 years. After the baseline hip fracture, 6% of residents experienced a subsequent fracture within 6 months, 12% within 1 year, and 21% within 5 years. In addition, 23% of residents died within 6 months, 31% within 1 year, and 60% within 5 years. High functional status was associated with a five times greater risk of subsequent fracture (high vs low functional status, hazard ratio=5.10, <i>P</i><.005). Age, sex, BMI, comorbidities, cognitive status, and medication use were not associated with subsequent fracture.</p> <p><b>CONCLUSION: </b> Hip fractures are a sentinel event in nursing home residents, with a high incidence of subsequent fracture and death occurring within 1 year. Identification of prefracture characteristics and postfracture complications associated with mortality should help guide secondary prevention efforts in nursing home residents.</p><p />",
language="",
issn="0002-8614",
doi="10.1111/j.1532-5415.2008.01918.x",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1532-5415.2008.01918.x"
}