Osteoporosis is a disorder of low bone mass and micro-architectural deterioration resulting in decreased mechanical strength and increased susceptibility to fractures even after minimal trauma. These 'minimal trauma fractures' (also known as 'osteoporotic', 'low trauma' or 'fragility' fractures) are the hallmark of a chronic and disabling disease that affects both men and women worldwide. On statistical grounds, more than 50 % of postmenopausal women and 30 % of men over the age of 60 years will suffer at least one minimal trauma fracture during their remaining lifetime. Any osteoporotic fracture predisposes to further fractures, significant morbidity and premature death. Thus, following a first minimal trauma fracture both men and women have a two- to threefold increased risk of subsequent fracture. This study aims to determine feasibility of evaluating different models of care through a structured multidisciplinary path tailored to identify, assess and treat hip fracture patients in an effective timely manner that are at high risk of subsequent fracture (Type A model) and to compare its effectiveness and feasibility with a type B, C \& D model as proposed by Ganda et al at the Aga Khan University, with collaboration of the departments of Orthopaedics, Chemical Pathology, Family Medicine and Internal Medicine.
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Secondary fracture prevention of hip
Timeframe: 1 year of follow-up
Total Secondary fracture prevention
Timeframe: 1 year of follow-up