As bone density loss accelerates after menopause, physicians urge women in midlife to prioritize skeletal health – before fractures signal a crisis that could have been prevented.
Every year, osteoporosis causes more than two million bone fractures in the India and women account for roughly 80 percent of those cases. Yet many women in their 40s and 50s remain unaware they are losing bone mass at a rate that could leave them vulnerable to debilitating breaks, chronic pain, and loss of independence in the decades ahead.
This Mother’s Day, orthopedic specialists and endocrinologists are urging women, particularly those between 40 and 65 to treat bone health as a medical priority, not an afterthought.
Osteoporosis is a condition in which bones become porous, brittle, and prone to fracture. It develops silently over years, producing no pain or obvious symptoms, earning it the label “the silent disease.” A woman may feel perfectly healthy until a minor fall or even a sneeze results in a broken wrist, hip, or vertebra.
The biology is straightforward but sobering. Women have smaller, thinner bones than men to begin with, and estrogen, which helps protect bone density, drops sharply at menopause, typically in the early-to-mid 50s. In the first five to seven years following menopause, women can lose up to 20 percent of their bone density, according to the National Osteoporosis Foundation.
The window is to build and protect bone is really in your 30s and 40s, by the time a woman is in her late 50s and something breaks, we’re often managing a condition that could have been prevented or significantly delayed.
Not all women face equal risk. Physicians identify several key factors that increase susceptibility to osteoporosis:
Family history of osteoporosis or hip fracture
Low body weight or small frame
Early menopause (before age 45) or surgical removal of ovaries
Long-term use of corticosteroids such as prednisone
Smoking and excessive alcohol consumption
Sedentary lifestyle and low calcium or vitamin D intake
History of eating disorders or prolonged amenorrhea
Women with one or more of these risk factors are encouraged to speak with their physician about a bone density scan (DEXA scan) before the age of 65, the standard screening age for average-risk women.
Bone health experts emphasize that the choices women make in their 40s and 50s can meaningfully alter their trajectory. The strategies are well-established, if underutilized.
Women between 40 and 50 need approximately 1,000 milligrams of calcium daily; after 50, that figure rises to 1,200 mg. Vitamin D, which enables calcium absorption, should reach 600 to 800 IU daily, with higher doses sometimes recommended for those who are deficient. Dairy products, leafy greens, fortified foods, and supplements are common sources.
Activities that place stress on the skeleton – walking, jogging, tennis, dancing, and resistance training, stimulate bone formation. Physicians recommend at least 30 minutes of weight-bearing activity most days of the week, along with balance and strength exercises to reduce fall risk.
For women diagnosed with osteoporosis or its precursor, osteopenia, several FDA-approved medications can slow bone loss or promote new bone growth. Bisphosphonates such as alendronate are commonly prescribed, while newer agents including denosumab and romosozumab offer additional options for high-risk patients. Treatment decisions should be made in consultation with a physician and tailored to individual risk profiles.
Current guidelines recommend bone density screening for all women at age 65, and earlier for postmenopausal women under 65 who carry significant risk factors. Many clinicians argue this threshold should be discussed proactively with patients in their 40s.
“A DEXA scan takes about 10 to 15 minutes, it’s painless, and it gives us actionable information,”. “If we find a woman at 48 has lower bone density than expected, we have time to intervene. If we wait until she’s 65 and has a hip fracture, the conversation is very different.”
Hip fractures carry particular consequences. Studies estimate that up to 30 percent of older adults who sustain a hip fracture die within one year due to related complications. Many survivors experience permanent loss of mobility.
A Different Kind of Mother’s Day Gift
Physicians are encouraging families to consider bone health conversations as a meaningful act of care this Mother’s Day – not to cause alarm, but to prompt action while options remain plentiful.
We talk to women about heart health, about cancer screenings, about their mental health but bone health too deserves equal attention. The goal is for women to remain strong, active, and independent, to be able to do everything they want to do for themselves and their families for decades to come.”