Association between drinking water hardness and incidence of hospitalization for childhood fracture: an ecological study of England
Clementine Kerwin, Emma M Clark, Andrew Judge, Samuel Hawley

TL;DR
This study found that children in areas with hard drinking water in England had fewer hospitalizations for fractures compared to those in areas with soft water.
Contribution
The study provides new evidence linking drinking water hardness to reduced childhood fracture hospitalization rates, adjusting for sociodemographic factors.
Findings
Hard water areas had 10%-15% fewer fracture hospitalizations for children compared to soft water areas.
Both calcium and magnesium concentrations in water showed dose–response associations with fewer fracture admissions.
The reduction in hospitalizations was consistent across different skeletal sites and repeat fractures.
Abstract
Bone fracture during childhood is a common injury, with rates in early adolescence equivalent to that of older age. Nutrition is profoundly important for healthy skeletal development, although data are scarce on the extent to which bone-forming minerals in drinking water might contribute to musculoskeletal health. The aim of this study was to describe the association between the hardness of local domestic drinking water across England with rates of hospitalization for childhood fracture, while adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics. Total water hardness (CaCO3) and calcium and magnesium concentrations were obtained de novo from water companies. Counts of hospitalizations for fracture in patients aged under 18 yr were extracted from the Hospital Episode Statistics database (April 1, 2012, to March 31, 2020). Sex-specific Poisson regression was used to describe the association…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBone health and osteoporosis research · Magnesium in Health and Disease · Injury Epidemiology and Prevention
