Conference Coverage
Consider cognitive reframing of osteoporosis to improve adherence
ORLANDO – Counter negative patient perceptions about osteoporosis treatment by explaining the risks of treatment with medications as well as the...
Xuxuan Liu is an Ambulatory Care Clinical Pharmacy Specialist, and Aeman Choudhury is a Home-Based Primary Care Clinical Pharmacy Specialist, both at the Captain James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center in Chicago Illinois. Cody Anderson is a Long-Term Care Consultant Pharmacist at Omnicare in Decatur, Illinois.
Correspondence: Xuxuan Liu (xuxuan.liu@va.gov)
Author disclosures
The authors report no actual or potential conflicts of interest with regard to the article.
Disclaimer
The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of Federal Practitioner, Frontline Medical Communications Inc., the U.S. Government, or any of its agencies.
The HBPC population is often in flux due to discharges as patients pass away, become eligible for long-term care, advance to hospice or palliative care status, or see an improvement in their condition to transition back into the community. Along with patients who are bed-bound, have poor prognosis, and barriers to access (eg, transportation issues), interventions for DEXA scan referrals are often not clinically indicated. During calculations of the FRAX score, documentation is often missing from a patient’s medical chart, making it difficult to answer all questions on the questionnaire. This does increase the utility of the OST score as the calculation is much easier and does not rely on other osteoporotic factors. Despite these restrictions for offering DEXA scans, the HBPC service has a high standard of excellence in preventing falls, a major contributor to fractures. Physical therapy services are readily available, nursing visits are frequent and as clinically indicated, vitamin D levels are maintained within normal limits via supplementation, and medication management is performed at least quarterly among other interventions.
The retrospective chart review of patients in the HBPC program suggests that there may be a lack of standardized screening for osteoporosis in the male patient population. As seen within the data, there is great potential for interventions as many of the patients would be candidates for screening based on the OST score. The tool is easy to use and readily accessible to all health care providers and staff. By increasing screening of eligible patients, it also increases the identification of those who would benefit from osteoporosis treatment. While the HBPC population has access limitations (eg, homebound, limited life expectancy), the implementation of a protocol and extension of concepts from this study can be extrapolated into other PACT clinics at VA facilities. Osteoporosis in the male population is often overlooked, but screening procedures can help reduce health care expenditures.
ORLANDO – Counter negative patient perceptions about osteoporosis treatment by explaining the risks of treatment with medications as well as the...
A telehealth program supports meaningful partnerships between urban geriatric specialists and rural health care providers to facilitate increased...
Stroke patients are at increased risk of osteoporosis and fractures, yet few receive bone mineral density testing and treatment.