Osteoporosis Risk Score Calculator

Check osteoporosis screening likelihood with structured inputs. Compare score, BMI, and referral signals in seconds. Designed for education, tracking, and earlier bone health action.

Calculator Inputs

Enter realistic values. This tool estimates screening priority, not fracture probability or treatment need.

Clear

Example Data Table

Profile Age Weight Height OST Score Risk Flags Typical Output
Postmenopausal woman with fracture history 68 52 kg 160 cm -3 5 Screening Recommended
Postmenopausal woman with moderate factors 59 63 kg 165 cm 0 2 Higher Screening Priority
Premenopausal woman with few factors 42 70 kg 167 cm 5 0 Lower Current Screening Priority
Man with multiple risk factors 71 61 kg 172 cm -2 4 Clinical Review Advised

Formula Used

1) Body Mass Index: BMI = weight in kilograms ÷ height in meters².

2) OST screening score: OST = 0.2 × (weight in kg − age in years), then truncated to an integer.

3) Educational profile points: Additional points are added for recognized clinical factors such as low body size, smoking, heavy alcohol use, rheumatoid arthritis, glucocorticoids, parental hip fracture, prior fragility fracture, inactivity, and low calcium or vitamin D intake.

Interpretation: The OST result is shown beside an educational risk-flag summary. The combined output helps estimate screening priority, but DXA testing and clinician review remain the definitive next steps.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter age, sex, weight, and height.
  2. Select menopause status when relevant.
  3. Mark each risk factor as yes or no.
  4. Press Calculate Risk Score to display the result above the form.
  5. Review the OST score, BMI, risk-flag count, and screening tier.
  6. Use the CSV or PDF buttons to save the displayed summary.
  7. Discuss elevated results, fractures, or medication-related risks with a clinician.

Frequently Asked Questions

1) Does this calculator diagnose osteoporosis?

No. It estimates screening priority using a simple age and weight formula plus recognized clinical factors. Diagnosis still requires medical evaluation, usually with DXA bone density testing.

2) What does the OST score represent?

The OST score is a quick screening index derived from age and body weight. Lower values suggest greater screening priority, especially in postmenopausal women.

3) Why is BMI included?

Lower body size is associated with higher osteoporosis risk. BMI gives added context beyond raw body weight and helps explain why leaner users may receive higher screening priority.

4) Can men use this tool?

Yes, but routine screening guidance for men is less certain. The calculator can still highlight risk factors and support a discussion with a clinician.

5) Which factors usually raise risk?

Common factors include older age, postmenopausal status, low body weight, smoking, heavy alcohol use, glucocorticoids, rheumatoid arthritis, prior fragility fracture, and family history of hip fracture.

6) Why is fracture history important?

A low-trauma fracture after age 50 can signal weakened bone strength. It often raises concern even before formal bone density testing is performed.

7) When should someone seek clinical screening?

Women 65 or older should generally be screened. Postmenopausal women under 65 with risk factors should discuss earlier screening. Men with several risk factors also warrant review.

8) Are the CSV and PDF files medical reports?

No. They are convenience exports of your entered result summary. They can support record keeping, but they are not official clinical documents.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.