Critical Awareness Shortfalls Exposed in Latest UAE Research
A groundbreaking cross-sectional study published in Cureus has shed light on significant osteoporosis knowledge gaps among women in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Titled 'Osteoporosis Knowledge, Education, and Lifestyle Practices in UAE Women', the research conducted between February and April 2023 involved 386 women aged 19 to 65 years. It reveals average levels of knowledge, with a mean Osteoporosis Knowledge Assessment Tool (OKAT) score of 7.39 out of a possible 16 (SD ±3.054). Notably, 64.2% scored average, while 26.9% had low knowledge, underscoring the need for targeted interventions in this rapidly aging population.
Osteoporosis, a systemic skeletal disease characterized by low bone mineral density and microarchitectural deterioration of bone tissue, leads to increased fragility and fracture susceptibility. In the UAE, where vitamin D deficiency affects up to 80% of the population due to indoor lifestyles and dietary habits, the condition poses a growing threat. Hip fracture rates stand at 2.25 per 1,000 population annually, projected to double by 2030 as the population over 65—particularly women—rises by 150%.
This study builds on a 2024 Cureus report showing only 41.9% of UAE adults had good knowledge, 38.8% positive attitudes, and 45.3% poor practices toward osteoporosis prevention.
Understanding Osteoporosis: The Silent Bone Thief Affecting UAE Women
Osteoporosis (from Greek 'porous bone') develops when bone resorption outpaces formation, resulting in brittle bones prone to fractures from minor trauma. Postmenopausal women are at highest risk due to estrogen decline, which accelerates bone loss. Symptoms often absent until a fracture occurs—earning it the moniker 'silent thief'—making early screening vital.
In the UAE context, cultural factors like abaya-wearing limiting sun exposure, preference for indoor activities, and diets low in calcium exacerbate risks. Vitamin D, synthesized via UVB skin exposure or dietary sources, is crucial for calcium absorption; deficiency (<20 ng/mL) prevalent in 72-80% of Emiratis.
Prevalence and Rising Burden in the UAE and Gulf Region
UAE osteoporosis prevalence is 3.1% overall (3.2% women), per 2016 data, but underreported due to low screening. Regional neighbors like Saudi Arabia report up to 39.5% in postmenopausal women. Globally, WHO estimates 1 in 3 women over 50 affected; UAE's aging demographic (women 65+ projected 150% increase) signals crisis.
Hip fractures cost UAE healthcare billions, with projections doubling by 2030. Vitamin D deficiency, linked to 80% cases, stems from scant sunlight despite sunny climate—paradox of modern lifestyles.
Related: Explore UAE health research opportunities at higher-ed research jobs.
Methodology of the Cureus Cross-Sectional Study
Researchers used convenience sampling at primary health centers, administering the validated OKAT questionnaire (16 items on risk factors, prevention). Additional questions covered education, supplementation, exercise. Statistical analysis included chi-square tests for associations (p<0.05 significant).
- Sample: 386 women (mean age ~35? demographics not detailed).
- Knowledge categories: Low (<8), average (8-11), good (>12).
- Lifestyle: Calcium/vit D intake, weight-bearing exercise (walking, weights).
See full Cureus study for tables on scores and p-values.
Key Knowledge Gaps Identified Among Participants
Mean OKAT score 7.39 indicated average awareness. Gaps prominent in risk factors: only ~50% knew family history, steroids risks; <40% aware screening age (50+ postmenopausal). Prevention knowledge better: 70% recognized calcium/vit D, exercise roles.
Higher education correlated strongly (p<0.001): university graduates scored 9.2 vs 5.8 high school or less.
| Knowledge Category | % Correct |
|---|---|
| Risk factors | 55% |
| Prevention | 68% |
| Screening | 42% |
Lifestyle Practices: Promising Starts but Room for Improvement
Positive: 68.9% took calcium supplements, 62.4% vitamin D (associated with knowledge p=0.002, p<0.001). 71.8% engaged weight-bearing exercise.
However, 2024 study showed 45.3% poor practices overall. Sedentary jobs, fast food diets low calcium persist. Study: Knowledge linked supp but not exercise (p=0.12).
- Daily calcium sources: Dairy scarce in traditional diets.
- Sun exposure: Cultural norms limit.
- Smoking: Low in women but rising.
Factors Influencing Knowledge: Education as Key Driver
Higher education strongly predicted knowledge (p<0.001). Urban vs rural divide, healthcare exposure. Females better than prior adult studies.
88.1% wanted prevention programs—opportunity for UAE unis health education initiatives.
For career in health research, see research assistant jobs.
Government and Societal Responses: MoHAP Initiatives
Ministry of Health and Prevention (MoHAP) promotes screening post-50 via densitometers in clinics. World Osteoporosis Day campaigns stress calcium/vit D, exercise, no smoking/caffeine excess. Aligns WHO: 1/3 women >50 affected.
Recommendations from the Study and Experts
- Tailored education programs for low-educated women.
- Integrate bone health in school curricula.
- Promote vit D fortified foods, sun-safe exposure.
- Regular DEXA scans for at-risk (family hx, early menopause).
- Lifestyle: 30min daily walk, 1200mg calcium, 600-2000IU vit D.
Emirates Osteoporosis Society (EOS) 6th Conference Jan 2026 Dubai: EOS 2026 advances diagnosis/management.
Implications for UAE Women's Health and Economy
Gaps risk fractures, disability, AED billions healthcare costs. Women bear brunt: postmenopausal estrogen drop + lifestyle = high vulnerability. Proactive education cuts burden 20-30% via prevention.
UAE unis like UAEU, Khalifa lead research; opportunities in UAE academic jobs.
Future Outlook: Conferences and Policy Shifts
2026 EOS Dubai focuses metabolic bone diseases. MoHAP fortification policies, screening expansion expected. Research trajectory: personalized via genomics.
Photo by Nino Liverani on Unsplash
Actionable Insights for UAE Women
- Assess risk: DEXA scan if >50, family hx, low BMI.
- Diet: Yogurt, fortified milk, greens; 1200mg Ca/day.
- Vit D: Supplements if deficient (test blood).
- Exercise: Weights 3x/week, walk daily.
- Avoid: Soda, smoking, excess alcohol.
Consult doctor; track via apps. Explore health ed careers at higher ed career advice.



