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. 2016 Mar 14;71(9):1230–1234. doi: 10.1093/gerona/glw034

Table 1.

Demographic Characteristics of 892,837 Long-stay Nursing Home Residents According to Whether They Experienced a Hip Fracture During Follow-up

Experienced a Hip Fracture Died Without a Hip Fracture Discharged Without a Fracture Alive Without a Fracture
(n = 29,358) (n = 358,790) (n = 93,014) (n = 411,675)
Age (y)
 65–69 1,273 (4.3) 14,128 (3.9) 9,747 (10.5) 31,396 (7.6)
 70–74 2,072 (7.1) 23,964 (6.7) 11,718 (12.6) 43,391 (10.5)
 75–79 3,993 (13.6) 42,852 (11.9) 15,783 (17.0) 65,552 (15.9)
 80–84 6,589 (22.4) 72,247 (20.1) 19,958 (21.5) 92,107 (22.4)
 85–89 7,654 (26.1) 91,642 (25.5) 19,382 (20.8) 95,716 (23.3)
 90–94 5,552 (18.9) 74,055 (20.6) 11,803 (12.7) 60,198 (14.6)
 95 and older 2,225 (7.6) 39,902 (11.1) 4,623 (5.0) 23,315 (5.7)
Female (%) 22,857 (77.9) 259,200 (72.2) 66,681 (71.7) 315,530 (76.6)
Race* (%)
 White 26,586 (90.8) 309,181 (86.4) 73,381 (79.1) 340,067 (82.8)
 Black 1,740 (5.9) 36,790 (10.3) 14,457 (15.6) 54,473 (13.3)
 Hispanic 458 (1.6) 5,293 (1.5) 2,433 (2.6) 7,552 (1.8)
 Asian 220 (0.8) 3,314 (0.9) 1,242 (1.3) 4,421 (1.1)
 Native American 147 (0.5) 1,232 (0.3) 580 (0.6) 1,566 (0.4)
 Other 140 (0.5) 1,944 (0.5) 725 (0.8) 2,694 (0.7)

*Among 890,636 residents (99.8%) with known race.