• About the Author: Dr. Almieda D. Cepedoza, known affectionately as Doc Apple, holds Fellowships in the Philippine Obstetrical and Gynecological Society, Philippine College of Surgeons, Philippine Society of Climacteric Medicine (Menopause Specialty), Association of Women Surgeons of the Philippines, and Academy of Medicine of the Philippines. She is affiliated with the different hospitals in Tagbilaran City, Bohol and operates her clinic at Ground Floor, Lim Hong Khu Medical Arts and Wellness Building, Celestino Gallares St., Tagbilaran City, Bohol. Her clinic hours is by appointment only through call or text: 0933-0429362.

“She Didn’t Have to Fall!” – The Shocking Truth About Menopause, Bone Health, and How My Mother’s Hip Fracture Could Have Been Prevented

A Fall That Changed Everything

One week ago, my 78-year-old mother slipped and shattered her hip. The pain was unbearable, the surgery grueling, and the recovery—long and uncertain. As I sat by her hospital bed, watching her struggle to move, one haunting thought wouldn’t leave me: This could have been prevented.

Her fracture wasn’t just bad luck. It was the result of silent bone loss, a ticking time bomb set off by menopause decades ago. And she’s not alone. Millions of women suffer needlessly because they don’t know how menopause steals their bone strength—until it’s too late.

Menopause: The Silent Bone Thief

Estrogen isn’t just a reproductive hormone—it’s the guardian of your bones. When menopause hits, estrogen levels crash, and bones start dissolving faster than they can rebuild. Women lose up to 20% of their bone density in just 5-7 years after menopause. Without warning, bones become fragile, brittle, and dangerously prone to snapping—even from a simple misstep.

“Just a Fall?” No—A Life-Altering Disaster

For elderly women like my mother, a broken hip isn’t just an injury—it’s a life-threatening crisis. Studies show:

  • 1 in 5 women over 50 will break a bone due to osteoporosis.
  • Hip fractures lead to permanent disability in 40% of cases.
  • Shockingly, 20% of hip fracture patients die within a year.

My mother survived her surgery, but her independence may never fully return. And the worst part? We could have stopped this.

The Heartbreaking Truth: Prevention Was Possible

Osteoporosis doesn’t happen overnight. It creeps in silently, but it can be stopped. If we had known then what we know now, my mother might still be walking pain-free. Here’s what every woman MUST do to protect herself:

1. Fight Back with Nutrition

  • Calcium is NOT enough! You need Vitamin D to absorb it. (My mother’s levels were critically low.)
  • Protein keeps muscles strong—weak muscles mean more falls.
  • Magnesium, Vitamin K2, and collagen are bone-saving warriors most women ignore.

2. Exercise—Or Lose Your Bones

  • Walking alone won’t save you. You need weight-bearing exercises (dancing, hiking, resistance training).
  • Balance training (Tai Chi, yoga) prevents deadly falls. (A few minutes a day could have kept my mother on her feet.)

3. Demand a Bone Density Test

  • A simple DEXA scan could have warned us years ago.
  • Medications (like bisphosphonates) can SLOW bone loss—my mother got them but I was too busy to check if these were enough.

4. Make Your Home a No-Fall Zone

  • Throw rugs? Deadly. (My mother tripped on one.)
  • Poor lighting? A fracture waiting to happen.
  • No grab bars in the bathroom? A disaster in slow motion.

Don’t Let This Happen to You or Your Loved Ones

My mother’s suffering didn’t have to happen. Ignorance is the real culprit. If you’re a woman over 40, in menopause, or caring for an aging mother, ACT NOW.

  • Get tested.  See your menopause specialist.
  • Eat for strong bones.
  • Move like your life depends on it (because it does).
  • Fall-proof your home TODAY.

This isn’t just health advice—it’s a lifesaving call to action. Don’t wait until a fall changes everything. Your future self will thank you.