Hip fracture surgery volumes among individuals 65 years and older during the COVID-19 pandemic
JAMA Jan 06, 2022
Okike K, Chan PH, Navarro RA, et al. - At the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in March-April 2020, studies described a decline in orthopedic trauma (ie, fractures) in the general population, this was followed by a return to baseline by summer 2020 once shelter-in-place orders were lifted. Researchers aimed at determining the hip fracture surgery volumes among individuals 65 years or older during the pandemic.
Among older individuals, hip fractures are common (> 250,000 per year in the US) and consequential (1-year mortality rate, 12%-37%).
Using data from the Kaiser Permanente (KP) Hip Fracture Registry (a surveillance tool with 100% coverage) along with membership data and administrative claims, researchers retrieved data of 18,288 patients (mean age, 82 years; 70.0% female; 7.9% Asian, 5.1% Black, 12.4% Hispanic, 0.7% Native American, 74.0% White; 83% with ≥ 3 comorbidities) who underwent hip fracture surgery between January 1, 2018, and September 26, 2021, in a California KP hospital (n = 31).
Except for fall 2020 when COVID-19 cases were low, there were lower hip fracture surgery volumes among older individuals when compared with 2 years previously starting with the spring 2020 surge until the COVID-19 vaccine became widely available in spring 2021.
In contrast, the general population had fracture incidence returned to baseline once shelter-in-place orders were lifted.
For the lower hip fracture surgery volumes among older individuals during the pandemic, a possible explanation is the reduced activity outside the home.
Consideration should be given to alternate explanations such as increased supervision by family members working from home or unemployed during the pandemic, and/or decreased nursing home use, as ground-level fall caused 90% of hip fractures among older individuals and most falls in older individuals (80%) occur in or around the home.
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