Litcius/Paper detail

Femoral fractures in the elderly in Brasil - incidence, lethality, and costs (2008-2018)

Paula Antas Barbosa de Vasconcelos, Anderson de Jesus Rocha, Rodrigo Jorge de Souza da Fonseca, Thiago Rhangel Gomes Teixeira, Enilton de Santana Ribeiro de Mattos, Alex Guedes

2020Revista da Associação Médica Brasileira22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To describe the incidence by gender and region, lethality, and costs associated with the treatment of femoral fractures in the elderly (≥ 60 years) hospitalized in the Unified Health System (SUS) of Brasil between 2008 and 2018. METHODS: This is a cross-sectional, descriptive, retrospective study of hospitalizations of elderly people due to femoral fractures by analyzing secondary data obtained from the SUS Hospital Information System (SIH/SUS) between 2008 and 2018; for calculation of epidemiological coefficients, we used information from demographic censuses (2000 and 2010) of the Brazilian Geography and Statistics Institute (IBGE). RESULTS: A total of 478,274 hospitalizations were recorded in the period; the incidence was 1.7 times higher in females (overall average of 274.91/100,000 for women and 161/100,000 for men). The Southeast region had the highest absolute number of hospitalizations and the South region presented the highest annual overall average incidence (224.02/100,000). The average annual cost for SUS for the treatment of femoral fractures in the elderly was R$ 99,718,574.30. CONCLUSIONS: In the evaluated period (2008-2018), femoral fractures in the elderly had a high incidence (478,274 hospitalizations; 224.02 cases/100,000 elderly), a predominance of females (1.7F/1.0M), a higher absolute number of hospitalizations in the Southeast region and a higher incidence in the South region; the lethality was high (an increase of 17.46%; overall mean coefficient of 4.99%/year); and the costs for the SUS were huge (an increase of 126.24%; average annual expenditure of R$ 99,718,574.30).

Topics & Concepts

Incidence (geometry)MedicineEpidemiologyDemographyRetrospective cohort studySurgeryInternal medicineSociologyOpticsPhysicsHip and Femur FracturesBone health and osteoporosis researchHealth, Nursing, Elderly Care