Litcius/Paper detail

Fracture liaison service—a multidisciplinary approach to osteoporosis management

Hai Le, Benjamin W. Van, Hania Shahzad, Polly Teng, Nisha Punatar, Garima Agrawal, Bart Wise

2024Osteoporosis International27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A fracture liaison service is a systems-level multidisciplinary approach designed to reduce subsequent fracture risk in patients who recently sustained fragility fractures. It is estimated that one in three women and one in five men over the age of 50 years old have osteoporosis. Nonetheless, only 9 to 20% of patients who sustain an initial fragility fracture eventually receive any osteoporosis treatment. With the aim of preventing subsequent fractures, a fracture liaison service (FLS) works through identifying patients presenting with fragility fractures to the hospital and providing them with easier access to osteoporosis care through referrals for bone health and fracture risk assessment and recommendation or initiation of osteoporosis treatment. Currently, there are four major types of FLS models ranging from services that only identify at-risk patients and inform and educate the patient but take no further part in communicating their findings to other stakeholders in patients' care, to services that identify, investigate, and initiate treatment at the other end of the spectrum. In this article, we review the benefits, challenges, and outcomes of FLS in the American healthcare system with further exploration of the roles each member of the multidisciplinary team can play in improving patients' bone health.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMultidisciplinary approachOsteoporosisFragility fractureFragilityOrthopedic surgeryMultidisciplinary teamRheumatologyHealth careService (business)Physical therapyMedical emergencyIntensive care medicineFamily medicineNursingSurgeryInternal medicineBone mineralEconomic growthChemistryEconomySociologySocial sciencePhysical chemistryEconomicsBone health and osteoporosis researchHip and Femur FracturesBone fractures and treatments