Press Release

Barnabas Health Ambulatory Care Center’s
Project Healthy Bones Celebrates Osteoporosis Month

local residents of Caldwell, Livingston and West Orange participating in a Project Healthy Bones class

Pictured here at the weekly class are local residents of Caldwell, Livingston and West Orange participating in a Project Healthy Bones class.

The New Jersey Interagency Council on Osteoporosis has joined with the National Osteoporosis Foundation (NOF) to “make lifelong bone health a family tradition” and raise awareness for osteoporosis and bone health during May— Osteoporosis Awareness and Prevention Month.

Osteoporosis is a disease that can be passed on through generations. Men, women and anyone with a family history are encouraged to get screened for osteoporosis and join a local Project Healthy Bones program to help decrease bone loss, increase bone density and improve strength, balance and flexibility.

A 24-week peer-led low impact exercise and education program, Project Healthy Bones runs classes at the Barnabas Health Ambulatory Care Center (ACC) in Livingston, as well as in all New Jersey counties. Each session includes exercises to improve strength, balance and flexibility, and education on nutrition, safety, drug therapy and lifestyle related to osteoporosis.

Known as “the silent disease,” osteoporosis is a serious condition that causes bones to become thin, brittle and easily broken. Nearly half of all women and twenty percent of all men will have an osteoporosis-related fracture in their lifetime. Osteoporosis can impair an individual’s ability to walk unassisted and often results in prolonged or permanent disability, institutionalization or death.

“Fortunately, with healthy behaviors like performing weight bearing exercises, having a balanced diet rich in calcium and vitamin D, avoiding smoking and excessive alcohol, and having bone density testing and medications when neeeded, this condition is largely preventable for most people,” said Susan Allison, RN, Osteoporosis Center at the ACC.

A 2008 survey conducted by NOF found that “almost 80 percent of Americans 45 and older do not believe osteoporosis is a risk factor in broken bones; 40 percent of women and 60 percent of men age 45 and older have little or no concern about their bone health; and almost half of Americans age 45 and older are not aware that a fracture and a broken bone are the same.”

Men and women—especially those with a family history of osteoporosis—are urged to recognize their risk and get a bone density (DXA) scan, which is covered by Medicare for both men and women age 65 and over.

NOF, the council, as well as the Osteoporosis Center at the Ambulatory Care Center, encourage both men and women to get screened for osteoporosis and join a local Project Healthy Bones program, which is offered at the Barnabas Health Ambulatory Care Center. Please call 973.322.7430 for more information about the Project Healthy Bones classes at the ACC and also the services provided at the Saint Barnabas Osteoporosis Center.

May 26, 2009

Contact: Angela M. Kessler
Director, Public Relations and Marketing
(p) 973-322-7327

 

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