🔇SILENT-DISEASE WATCH — The Pattern the Family Often Notices First
Osteoporosis usually has no symptoms until a fragility fracture happens. That is why surveillance — DXA at the right age and right interval — is the whole game. But there are subtle patterns the family can notice well before a fracture: height loss, kyphosis (dowager's hump), new mid-back pain. Have someone measure standing height at home every year — mark it on a doorframe. A loss of more than 1.5 inches (4 cm) from peak height — or more than 0.8 inch (2 cm) in a year — strongly suggests a vertebral compression fracture, which is often painless and unrecognized. Frame this honestly: this is pattern recognition, not diagnosis. But noticing earns you a DXA conversation.
🎯Three Phases · One Force Field
Every square belongs to one of three phases of mastery. Inside each square's detail panel, the four sections — Concepts · Skills · Actions · Plan — are the building blocks of these phases.
📘 Learn It Tier 1 · Aware
Identity earned: Self-Advocate. The "know" — what osteoporosis is (a silent bone-mineral-density disease that announces itself with a fragility fracture), how DXA / T-score / Z-score / FRAX work, the risk factors (postmenopausal, low BMI, family history, steroids, AI, ADT, smoking, alcohol, CKD, cirrhosis, RA), and the honest framing that bone strength is highly modifiable at any age.
🛠 Live It Tier 2 · Active
Identity earned: Care-Team Member. The "do" — daily skills (resistance + weight-bearing exercise, calcium from food, vitamin D adequacy, fall-prevention routine, medication adherence, height tracking) and this-week actions that turn skills into habits — including building the family Ambassador partnership and bridging into the RRPS Fall-Prevention Certification.
📣 Share It Tier 3 · Certified
Identity earned: Ambassador. The "carry forward" — handle bone-health identity honestly, mentor a newly-diagnosed person via BHOF, navigate the under-screening of AA / Latina / Asian women and the under-treatment of men, and bridge the post-fracture treatment gap so the next fracture doesn't happen.
🛡️Your Force Field — 16 Squares
Click any square to open its detail panel. Each square is a tile in your shield. Keep clicking, learning, and acting — your Force Field gets stronger every step.
What Is Osteoporosis?
A silent bone disease in which bone mineral density (BMD) and bone-microarchitecture quality drop enough that everyday loads can cause a fragility fracture (wrist, spine, hip, shoulder). About 10 million Americans have osteoporosis; another ~44 million have osteopenia (low bone mass, not yet osteoporosis). Most people don't know they have it until they break a bone — which is why surveillance with DXA matters. Highly modifiable with exercise, nutrition, and (when indicated) medication.
Primer360 Human Anatomy
Bone Remodeling & Microarchitecture
Bone is a living tissue in constant turnover — osteoclasts dissolve old bone, osteoblasts build new bone. Peak bone mass is reached by ~age 30; after menopause (or with low testosterone), resorption outpaces formation and BMD falls. Trabecular (spongy) bone in the spine and hip is lost first. The RANK/RANKL/osteoprotegerin system controls osteoclasts — and is the target of denosumab and the explanation for its rebound effect when stopped.
AnatomyWho Gets It? — Primary vs Secondary
Primary osteoporosis: postmenopausal women (estrogen loss), older men (slower bone loss with age and low testosterone). Secondary osteoporosis — bone loss driven by another condition or medication: glucocorticoid use (most common), aromatase inhibitors (breast cancer survivors), androgen deprivation therapy (prostate cancer survivors), CKD-mineral bone disease, cirrhosis / chronic liver disease, hyperthyroidism / hyperparathyroidism, RA & other autoimmune, malabsorption / celiac / IBD, anorexia / RED-S, SSRIs / anticonvulsants / PPIs / heparin, multiple myeloma.
PrimerThe Numbers — T-score, Z-score, FRAX, TBS
~10M US adults have osteoporosis; ~44M have osteopenia. T-score compares your BMD to a healthy young adult: ≥-1.0 normal · -1.0 to -2.5 osteopenia · ≤-2.5 osteoporosis. Z-score compares you to age-matched peers (used in premenopausal / younger / men under 50). FRAX = 10-year fracture probability (major osteoporotic + hip). TBS (trabecular bone score) refines DXA. Vertebral fracture assessment (VFA) on DXA images can detect silent vertebral fractures.
PrimerRecognize Silent Signs (SILENT-DISEASE WATCH)
Height loss (measure standing height yearly at home — mark a doorframe), kyphosis (forward upper-back curve — vertebral fractures stacking), new mid-back pain in an older adult, any fragility fracture (fall from standing height or less). Plus medication and condition red flags: long-term steroids, AI / ADT, CKD, cirrhosis, RA, hyperthyroidism, anorexia, SSRIs, PPIs, anticonvulsants. Any of these = ask for a DXA conversation. Pattern recognition, not diagnosis.
Learn ItDiagnostic Workup + Wellness
DXA (central — hip + spine) is the diagnostic gold standard. USPSTF recommends screening women age 65+ (younger if FRAX-elevated); evidence is insufficient to recommend routine male screening, but BHOF/AACE/Endocrine Society support screening men 70+ or younger with risk factors. Secondary-cause workup: CBC, CMP, TSH, 25-OH vitamin D, PTH, 24-hr urine calcium, SPEP if anemia/older, celiac panel if suspected, testosterone in men. After a fragility fracture, work-up is mandatory — don't miss the post-fracture treatment gap.
Learn ItKnow My Numbers
T-score hip + spine · Z-score if premenopausal/younger · FRAX 10-yr major-osteoporotic + hip · TBS if available · VFA for silent vertebral fractures · 25-OH vitamin D (target ≥30 ng/mL) · serum calcium · PTH · creatinine / eGFR · height (yearly home + clinic) · weight / BMI · falls per year · medication adherence · calcium intake estimate. Bring a one-page numbers card.
Learn ItLifestyle Force Field — Resistance Is Medicine
Resistance + weight-bearing exercise has strong evidence for BMD and fracture risk (ACSM, BHOF). Resistance training 2–3×/week, weight-bearing impact (walking, jogging, jumping, dancing, stair-climbing) most days, balance training 2–3×/week (tai chi RCT-proven). Walking alone is not enough. Calcium 1,000–1,200 mg/day from food first; supplements only to close a gap. Vitamin D 800–1,000 IU. Smoking cessation, alcohol moderation (≤2 drinks/day men, ≤1 drink/day women), fall prevention (RRPS bridge), sleep, protein (~1.0–1.2 g/kg/day in older adults).
Learn ItMedications + Therapies — All Levers
Bisphosphonates (alendronate, risedronate oral; zoledronic acid IV yearly) — first-line; drug-holiday conversation typically after 5+ years if low/moderate ongoing risk. Denosumab (Q6-month SC) — strong fracture reduction; HONEST WARNING: do NOT discontinue without a follow-on antiresorptive — rebound vertebral fractures are real. Anabolics for severe/very-high-risk (teriparatide, abaloparatide — daily SC × up to 2 yr; romosozumab — monthly SC × 12 months, contraindicated within 1 yr of MI/stroke). Hormone therapy for early postmenopausal with vasomotor symptoms. ONJ and atypical femoral fracture are rare but real — discuss honestly without scaring people off treatment; the math overwhelmingly favors treatment in high-risk patients.
Live ItCare Team Members
PCP · Endocrinology (complex/refractory or anabolic candidate) · Rheumatology if autoimmune / on steroids · PT (balance + resistance + posture) · OT (home safety) · DXA Tech / Radiology · Pharmacist (medication-related fracture-risk review + adherence) · Geriatrics if older with comorbidities · Behavioral Health (mood + adherence) · Nutritionist (calcium-from-food coaching) · Dentist (pre-bisphosphonate dental clearance for high-risk procedures) · BHOF peer mentor · Family Ambassador.
Live ItTelemedicine & Tech
Telehealth follow-up for medication titration and adherence is well-suited to osteoporosis. FRAX calculator (free online — every adult 40+ should know theirs). BMI / fall-risk apps. Home BP cuff for orthostatic screening (falls). Step counter / activity tracker with resistance-training logging. Vitamin D / calcium intake apps. Fall-detection wearables (Apple Watch / Life Alert / Kanega) for older adults. Medication reminders — adherence is dismal in real-world osteoporosis data; the right tech can rescue it.
TechInsurance, Treatment Cost & Help
Generic bisphosphonates (alendronate, risedronate) are cheap ($4–15/month). Zoledronic acid IV yearly ($100–300 generic, often covered by Medicare Part B). Denosumab and anabolics (teriparatide, abaloparatide, romosozumab) are brand-name and expensive — manufacturer copay programs help but require navigation. Medicare covers DXA every 2 years for women with risk factors. BHOF Helpline 1-800-231-4222. NIH NIA 1-800-222-2225. Patient-assistance programs at every anabolic manufacturer. Audit your med list for bone-thinning agents.
Live ItEquity, Access & Cultural Competence
AA, Latina, and Asian women have lower fracture rates than white women but are screened and treated MUCH less often — a major under-diagnosis disparity. Black women have higher mortality after hip fracture than white women. Men are massively undertreated overall — most men with osteoporosis are never diagnosed; even after a hip fracture, fewer than 20% start bone medication. Rural patients have access gaps to DXA. Low-income patients have lower DXA rates. LGBTQ+ adults on long-term hormone therapy have specific bone considerations. Don't be preachy — be specific.
Share ItTalk to Kids, Partner, Family
Kids (especially adult children): "Mom/Dad has osteoporosis — bones thin enough that an everyday fall can break one. Help me measure their height yearly, walk the house for trip hazards, and remind them about their bone medicine." Partner: bed-partner / spouse first-line — measures height, watches kyphosis, supports adherence. Family history of hip fracture in a parent doubles your fracture risk — tell adult children. The Ambassador role for AA / Latina / Asian women whose risk gets underestimated is real public-health work — bring it up with sisters and aunts who turn 65.
Share ItMentor & Share Insights
BHOF peer-mentor program + support groups. NOF Generations of Strength. International Osteoporosis Foundation. Bone Health Day (May 24). RRPS Certification bridge for fall-prevention work. The newly-diagnosed person who hears "my T-score was -3.0, I've been on alendronate 4 years, I lift weights 3 days a week, I haven't broken anything" gets a different orientation than statistics. The Ambassador role for post-fracture treatment-gap recovery is high-leverage public health — most patients leave the hospital after a fragility fracture without bone medication.
Share ItJoin the ROI Study (PHIT)
PHIT — Population Health Impact Tracking. Pairs osteoporosis-specific outcome tracking with cost data — DXA timeliness, FRAX-driven treatment decisions, medication initiation rate after fragility fracture (the key quality gap), adherence, fall rates, fracture rates, ED visits, badge progress, self-reported QoL. Aggregate & anonymous. Cross-references the NHANES bone-health data and WHI (Women's Health Initiative) cohort.
Study🩺 Hand-off to my Bone-Health Team
Print and bring to your next visit. This page tells your team what you have prepared for, what you want to focus on, and how you would like to participate as an active member of your own care team.
- I am a Prepared Patient in training for osteoporosis. I have reviewed all 16 squares of this Force Field Fact Sheet.
- I have started building my Health Passport, my yearly home-height log, my FRAX score, my calcium-intake estimate, my vitamin D level, my fall log, my medication adherence tracker, and my bone-loss-risk medication audit (steroids, AI, ADT, SSRIs, anticonvulsants, PPIs) to bring to every visit.
- I want to teach back what I have learned and have you correct anything I have misunderstood — especially around my T-score, Z-score, FRAX, my treatment plan, the drug-holiday conversation, the denosumab discontinuation rule, when to call vs go to ED, and what to do after any fragility fracture (don't leave the hospital without a plan).
What helps my visit
Two minutes for me to teach back. One question I prepared. My latest yearly home-height log. FRAX score. Calcium intake estimate. Vit D level. Fall log. Medication audit. Confirm my T-score, FRAX category, and follow-up DXA interval on the chart. Don't skip secondary-cause workup if I had a fragility fracture.
What I am working on
Resistance training 2–3×/week · weight-bearing impact most days · balance training (tai chi or PT) · calcium 1,000–1,200 mg/day from food first · vitamin D 800–1,000 IU · medication adherence · home fall-prevention sweep · yearly home-height check · RRPS Certification bridge · BHOF peer connection · family Ambassador partnership.
How I want to participate
Shared decisions. Honest conversation about treatment options (oral vs IV bisphosphonate; denosumab; anabolics for severe; drug-holiday timing). AHRQ SHARE Approach. PT/OT referral early. Coordinate with Endocrinology / Rheumatology if needed. Discuss anabolic-first for very-high-risk. Don't let me leave the hospital after any fracture without a bone-health plan.
🔬 Help Prove This Works — Join the FFH ROI & PHIT Study
The Prepared Patient program is being studied to see whether better preparation actually improves outcomes — more timely DXA, more appropriate treatment initiation (especially closing the post-fracture treatment gap), better adherence, fewer falls, fewer fractures, fewer ED visits, more equitable screening of AA/Latina/Asian women and treatment of men — for osteoporosis patients and families. Your participation is voluntary, your data is aggregated and anonymized, and you can withdraw at any time. We also encourage parallel enrollment in cohort studies like NHANES bone health and WHI follow-up.
➕ Add-On Force Field Card · Osteoporosis Skill Mastery
If your care plan adds a specific skill or device, bolt on a 5-step Add-On Card. For osteoporosis common bolt-ons include: yearly home-height-tracking routine (doorframe marks + ruler), FRAX self-calculation routine, calcium-from-food daily count, vitamin D adequacy check, weekly resistance-training prescription (PT-guided), weight-bearing-impact daily walk, tai chi or balance class enrollment, home fall-prevention sweep, bisphosphonate dosing routine (empty stomach, water, stay upright 30 min), zoledronic acid IV yearly scheduling, denosumab Q6-month adherence routine, anabolic SC injection technique, post-fracture treatment-gap rescue routine, RRPS Fall-Prevention Certification bridge, family Ambassador height-and-kyphosis recognition drill.
Introduce
What it is, why it matters, what it does
Coach
Watch a demo + walk-through
Practice
Do it with a coach watching
Train
Use it daily with a check-in
Test
Demonstrate competence + earn badge
Ready to go deeper?
The Prepared Patient · Osteoporosis course turns this fact sheet into a guided journey: pre/post knowledge checks, the silent-disease-and-surveillance module, DXA / T-score / FRAX literacy, the resistance + weight-bearing exercise prescription, calcium-from-food-first nutrition, the bisphosphonate / denosumab / anabolic medication hierarchy with honest ONJ + atypical-femoral-fracture framing, the post-fracture treatment gap rescue, the falls-cascade bridge into RRPS / Falls / Sarcopenia / Orthostatic Hypotension / Vestibular / Hip Fracture, the family Ambassador role, and your printable Health Passport. Earn Aware → Active → Certified.