| Literature DB >> 28105113 |
Liang Wang1, Xiaowen Xu1, Yan Zhang1, Hongxia Hao1, Liying Chen1, Tianjiao Su1, Yan Zhang1, Weifeng Ma1, Yuanyuan Xie1, Tiantian Wang1, Fan Yang1, Li He3, Wenjiao Wang1, Xuemei Fu1, Yuanzheng Ma1.
Abstract
Osteoporosis, a chronic disease with no therapeutic cure, affects a growing number of people as the aging population in China rapidly increases. Therefore, developing an evidence-based model of health education and management for osteoporosis prevention is required. In the present study, an osteoporosis club was established, which is a novel model of health education and management for osteoporosis prevention. A unified management of membership was used based on a digitized database. A total of 436 patients with osteoporosis were randomly assigned to the osteoporosis club group or the self-management control group. For the osteoporosis club group, multiple activities of health education were performed, including monthly systematic health education lectures, exercise programs and communication parties once a year. For the control group, the participants took charge of their own musculoskeletal health. All data of the participants were collected and evaluated prior to and following intervention. In the pre-intervention assessment, no significant difference was identified in the health education between the two groups. Through the four-year intervention, the osteoporosis knowledge, health beliefs, living behavior, medication compliance, quality of life and bone mineral density of the osteoporosis club group were improved significantly compared with the control group (P<0.001), while the pain degree of the osteoporosis club group was relieved significantly more compared with the control group (P<0.001). The results in the present study suggest that setting up an osteoporosis club is an evidence-based model of health education and management for osteoporosis prevention in China.Entities:
Keywords: bone mineral density; compliance; health education; osteoporosis; quality of life
Year: 2016 PMID: 28105113 PMCID: PMC5228464 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2016.3822
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447