My Personal Journey to Osteoporosis Care and Awareness in Underserved Communities – Bone Talk
My personal journey to osteoporosis care and awareness in underserved communities
By Dr. Tasneem Hassan
My name is Dr. Tasneem Hassan and I work as a general practitioner in Nairobi, Kenya. After graduating in 2019, I started working in a public hospital in Nairobi.
Later I started working at Rayhaan Healthcare, where I met Dr. Mustafa Bhaiji, a consultant radiologist with a special interest in osteoporosis. I also learned about the DXA technology, which further sparked my interest in osteoporosis. As I learned more about my family’s history and observed many people with poor bone mass, I started to pay more attention to it.
This is the story of my grandmother, who fell a few years ago and broke her hip, needing hip replacement surgery and leaving her bedridden for a while. All these difficulties contributed to her death. For starters, we know she had low bone mass, but the lack of a bone DXA scan in Mombasa, Kenya delayed early diagnosis and treatment. She also had dementia and her recovery was difficult. In addition, there is a lack of awareness in our system about osteopenia and osteoporosis, which hinders early diagnosis and prevention. If our thinking about osteoporosis had advanced significantly earlier at the time, she might not have died from the comorbidities associated with the fracture.
Another interaction I had was with my mother, who had already suffered a fracture. She is currently going through menopause and a few months ago she broke her foot as a result of a fall. This could be a stress fracture. But given her age and menopause, higher risk of falls, and history of two fractures, I wouldn’t be shocked if she has poor bone mass, and thus osteopenia. Individualizing care is simple; we do it all the time. We shouldn’t allow people to walk around with untreated osteoporosis because they will eventually stop walking. It’s no longer the 1900s.
Osteoporosis is a disease that roughly causes 8.9 million fractures per yearculminating in one osteoporosis fracture every 3 seconds. One in three women and one in five men those aged 50 and over will experience an osteoporotic fracture. Osteoporosis causes bones to become weak and brittle, causing them to break easily even after a minor fall, bump, sneeze, or quick movement. I have seen people who have fractures that damage them not only physically, but emotionally as well. It reduces their overall quality of life, sometimes resulting in despair and isolation as people reduce social connection or are no longer able to do the activities they used to do. The prolonged loss of freedom and freedom of movement has caused physical, emotional and financial hardship to patients as well as their relatives and friends.
80% of it who have had at least one osteoporotic fracture are not diagnosed or treated for osteoporosis.
As a GP, I tried to read as much as I could after recovering from my pity party, which I felt was tragically avoidable. Over the past few weeks I have been focusing on a study of the prevalence of osteoporosis in our organization, particularly as it relates to ethnicity, age, menopause and risk factors.
Many women experience decreased bone mass after menopause and aging. I am very interested in following up on this group of patients and referring them to the best available care. We also conduct research based on the few DXA scans we have completed to help future generations.
It is also overlooked as a health problem in Africa for several reasons, including:
Overburdened by communicable diseases such as tuberculosis (TB) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
Not long ago there was a widespread belief that osteoporosis and resulting fragility fractures were uncommon among black Africans, but this is no longer the case.
We have come across many people of all races affected by osteopenia. However, the problem remains that there is no African research. This brings the FRAX scoring guideline into conflict because it does not take African race into account.
In our region, healthcare professionals also lack insights about osteoporosis.
Despite advances in scientific research and available therapies and diagnostic techniques, osteoporosis remains a global health problem with potentially disastrous consequences for patients and enormous costs to healthcare systems.
In this context, we can probably all agree that we need to improve osteoporosis treatment and raise awareness in underserved communities.
My goal is for more physicians to be informed about this topic and for this disease to be prioritized alongside other chronic conditions.
This story is part of a support initiative called Voices of Osteoporosis: Stories of Hope and Inspiration. If you have experienced osteoporosis as a patient or caregiver, we invite you to share your story. Your story can inspire others to learn how to protect their ability to live their best life and stay strong. click here learn more.