Falls Prevention
Updated March 2026 · 9 min read

Hip Protectors for Osteoporosis in Canada: What They Are, Who Needs Them, and Where to Buy

For Canadians with osteoporosis and a high risk of falls, a hip fracture isn't just a painful injury — it can be life-changing. Hip protectors are padded garments designed to reduce the force of impact when a fall does happen. When worn consistently, evidence shows they can meaningfully reduce hip fracture risk. The catch: most people don't wear them consistently enough.

What Hip Protectors Are

A hip protector is a garment — usually underwear-style shorts or a belt — with pads or shells positioned directly over the greater trochanter, the bony prominence of the outer hip that takes the brunt of a sideways fall. This is the exact part of the hip that fractures in most osteoporotic hip fractures.

The mechanism works in one of two ways depending on type:

Both come in underwear-style (built into shorts, worn like regular underpants) and belt-style (strapped around the hips over existing clothing). Underwear-style is generally preferred for all-day wear; belt-style may suit people who only want protection during higher-risk activities.

What the Evidence Shows

The landmark evidence on hip protectors comes from a Cochrane systematic review (Parker et al., 2014), which analysed data from randomized controlled trials involving nursing home residents and community-dwelling older adults. Key findings:

The adherence problem: In most studies, 30–60% of people prescribed hip protectors stopped wearing them regularly within months. This is not a failure of the device — it's a failure of comfort and practicality. The evidence strongly suggests that a worn hip protector works; the challenge is ensuring it gets worn.

Fraser Health in British Columbia explicitly includes hip protectors in its fall prevention program guidance for institutionalized seniors and high-risk community-dwellers. Canada.ca also recommends hip protectors as one of several targeted strategies to reduce injury severity from falls in people with osteoporosis.

Who Benefits Most

Hip protectors are not for everyone — they're most appropriate for people at the highest risk of both falling and fracturing. The strongest candidates include:

If you're unsure whether your fall risk is high enough to warrant a hip protector, discuss it with your family doctor, geriatrician, or osteoporosis specialist. Physiotherapists who do fall risk assessments can also advise based on your balance testing results.

Types Available in Canada

TypeProtection mechanismComfortBest for
Hard-shell (underwear) Energy deflection (rigid plastic) Bulkier, can feel warm Highest-risk individuals, institutional settings
Soft-shell (underwear) Energy absorption (foam/gel) Slim profile, more breathable Community-dwelling, improving daily adherence
Belt/wrap style Hard or soft shell Adjustable, worn over clothing Targeted use (outings, physiotherapy, higher-risk moments)

Canadian brands and retailers carrying hip protectors include Medical Supply Canada, BC Medical Supply, and online through Amazon.ca (search "hip protector osteoporosis" — approximately $40–$120 CAD depending on brand and style). Some Shoppers Drug Mart locations can special-order through their Shoppers Home Health Care division. Look for the brand Safehip (Danish design, widely available through Canadian medical supply distributors) or Tytex for well-regarded options.

Coverage and Cost in Canada

Hip protectors generally cost $40–$120 CAD per garment. Coverage varies:

Practical Guidance for Choosing and Using Hip Protectors

If you or a family member is considering hip protectors, a few practical points will make the difference between something that gathers dust and something that actually gets worn:

Limitations: What Hip Protectors Cannot Do

Hip protectors prevent fractures from falls — they do nothing to prevent falls themselves. This is an important distinction. The most effective fall prevention strategy combines multiple interventions: balance and strength exercise, home safety modifications, medication review, and appropriate footwear — with hip protectors as an additional layer of protection for the highest-risk individuals.

Practical limitations that explain the adherence challenge:

Medical disclaimer: This article is for general information only and does not constitute medical advice. Hip protectors are one tool in fall and fracture prevention and should be discussed with your physician, physiotherapist, or osteoporosis specialist in the context of your individual health history, fall risk assessment, and osteoporosis management plan. Osteoporosis Canada (osteoporosis.ca) and your provincial health authority are authoritative sources for up-to-date clinical guidance.

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