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A scorecard for osteoporosis in four Latin American countries: Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, and Argentina

Authors :
Mo Amin
Rima Aziziyeh
Mohdhar Habib
Savannah Fernandes
Rebecca K McTavish
Javier Garcia Perlaza
Ana Ludke
Kaushik Sripada
Chris Cameron
Source :
Archives of Osteoporosis. 14
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

The state of osteoporosis care in Latin America is not well known. The results of our scorecard indicate an urgent need to improve policy frameworks, service provision, and service uptake for osteoporosis in Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, and Argentina. The scorecard serves as an important marker to measure future progress. We developed a scorecard to summarize key indicators of the burden of osteoporosis and its management in Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, and Argentina. The goal of the scorecard is to reduce the risk of osteoporotic fractures by promoting healthcare policies that will improve patient access to timely diagnosis and treatment. We conducted a systematic review of osteoporosis. We also interviewed several key opinion leaders to gather information on government policy, access to fracture risk assessments, and access to medications. We then leveraged a peer-reviewed template, initially applied to 27 European countries, to synthesize the information into a scorecard for Latin America. We presented information according to four main categories: burden of disease, policy framework, service provision, and service uptake and used a traffic light color coding system to indicate high, intermediate, and low risk. The systematic review included 108 references, of which 49 were specific to Brazil. The number of osteoporotic fractures in Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, and Argentina was forecasted to increase substantially (34% to 76% in each country) from 2015 to 2030. In general, policy frameworks, service provision, and service uptake were not structured to support current patients with osteoporosis and did not account for the future increases in fracture burden. Across all four countries, there was inadequate access to programs for secondary fracture prevention and only a small minority of patients received treatment for osteoporosis. Osteoporosis management, including the rate of post-fracture care, is very poor in Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, and Argentina and needs to be strengthened. Improvements in the rates of care are necessary to curb the debilitating impact of osteoporotic fractures on patients and health systems.

Details

ISSN :
18623514 and 18623522
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Archives of Osteoporosis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....562c68b70ac278391f646777d437b5b1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11657-019-0622-1