| Literature DB >> 21733149 |
Nicola Fairhall1, Colleen Langron, Catherine Sherrington, Stephen R Lord, Susan E Kurrle, Keri Lockwood, Noeline Monaghan, Christina Aggar, Liz Gill, Ian D Cameron.
Abstract
Frailty is a common syndrome that is associated with vulnerability to poor health outcomes. Frail older people have increased risk of morbidity, institutionalization and death, resulting in burden to individuals, their families, health care services and society. Assessment and treatment of the frail individual provide many challenges to clinicians working with older people. Despite frailty being increasingly recognized in the literature, there is a paucity of direct evidence to guide interventions to reduce frailty. In this paper we review methods for identification of frailty in the clinical setting, propose a model for assessment of the frail older person and summarize the current best evidence for treating the frail older person. We provide an evidence-based framework that can be used to guide the diagnosis, assessment and treatment of frail older people.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21733149 PMCID: PMC3146844 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-9-83
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Figure 1Important factors to assess in the frail patient and the interactions between them. aCaptured in the Frailty Phenotype; bDefined as difficulty experienced by an individual when executing activities (International Classification of Functioning (ICF)[26]); cDefined as problems experienced by an individual in their involvement in life situations (ICF).
Interventions and guidelines to address the common patterns of frailty in the clinical setting
| Pattern | Screening and assessment | |
|---|---|---|
| Unstable health conditions | Medical assessment | Medical management may include geriatrician review, medication review, intervention to increase compliance, referral for follow-up of medical conditions, for example memory clinic, continence clinic. |
| Specific information for common health conditions is provided in Additional file | ||
| Under nutrition | Setting appropriate screening, e.g. Mini Nutritional Assessment [ | Referral to a dietician for nutritional support, which may include: education about foods rich in energy and protein, nutrition advice about general healthy eating and benefits of regular exercise to improve health and overall wellbeing, and nutrition support. |
| Psychological factors | Geriatric Depression Scale (short form) [ | The Victorian Government Health Information toolkit for depression |
| Impaired cognition | Mini Mental Status Examination (MMSE) [ | The NICE clinical guideline, 'Dementia: Supporting people with dementia and their carers in health and social care', |
| Impaired vision/hearing | Brief clinical assessment | Referral for specialist medical assessment |
| Decreased mobility | Timed 4 m walk | Appropriately designed exercise interventions are effective in preventing falls in older people living in both the community [ |
| Lack of participation in life roles | Clinical assessment | Barriers to participation should be assessed. Randomized controlled trials have demonstrated increased participation with intervention targeting risk factors, such as modification of the home environment [ |
| Problems with services or support systems | Clinical assessment | There should be early and ongoing engagement with support and education of formal and informal carers [ |