Think brittle bones are just part of getting older? They're not — and what you can do about it will surprise you. In this episode of the Over 50 Health & Wellness Podcast, host Mark Sullivan explains how to protect your bones after 50, prevent osteoporosis, and stay steady on your feet, all in plain, friendly language. No fear, no gimmicks.
Learn why your bones are living tissue you can strengthen at any age, how much calcium and vitamin D you really need, the exercises that build bone where it matters most, a room-by-room home fall-proofing plan, and what a bone density (DEXA) scan actually involves. Backed by the NIH, CDC, and Harvard Health.
In this episode:• What osteoporosis really is — the "silent disease" explained• Who's most at risk (and why it's not only women)• The 3 pillars of strong bones: exercise, calcium, vitamin D• Fall-proofing your home in an afternoon• What a DEXA scan and T-score mean• What to do if you've already been diagnosed• 3 simple things you can start this week
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This episode is for education and encouragement only and is not medical advice. Decisions about bone density testing, calcium, vitamin D, and medication should be made with your doctor.Sources
- Bones are living tissue constantly remodeled; osteoporosis = more bone broken down than replaced; "silent disease"; breaks usually in hip/spine/wrist; affects ~1 in 5 women and ~1 in 20 men over 50; risk factors: NIH, National Institute on Aging — https://www.nia.nih.gov/health/osteoporosis/osteoporosis
- Calcium RDA (1,000 mg men 51–70; 1,200 mg women 51+ and all 71+) and vitamin D RDA (600 IU to age 70, 800 IU over 70); calcium + vitamin D meta-analysis (~15% fewer total fractures, ~30% fewer hip fractures); food-first guidance and upper limits: NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, Calcium — https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/Calcium-HealthProfessional/ · Vitamin D (Consumer) — https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/VitaminD-Consumer/ · Bone Health & Osteoporosis Foundation (800–1,000 IU for 50+) — https://www.bonehealthandosteoporosis.org/patients/diagnosis-information/bone-density-examtesting/
- Strength training builds denser bone, targets hip/spine/wrist, and benefits bone beyond aerobic exercise alone: Harvard Health — https://www.health.harvard.edu/healthy-aging-and-longevity/the-best-exercises-for-your-bones
- Falls: ~1 in 4 older adults fall yearly; leading cause of injury-related death for adults 65+: CDC, Older Adult Falls Data — https://www.cdc.gov/falls/data-research/index.html
- DEXA scan measures hip/spine; T-score interpretation (≥ −1.0 normal; −1.0 to −2.5 osteopenia; ≤ −2.5 osteoporosis); fracture risk rises ~1.5–2× per 1-point T-score drop: NIH NIAMS, Bone Mineral Density Tests — https://www.niams.nih.gov/health-topics/bone-mineral-density-tests-what-numbers-mean