Literature DB >> 33611409

Can you see frailty? An exploratory study of the use of a patient photograph in the transcatheter aortic valve implantation programme.

Sandra B Lauck1,2, Leslie Achtem1, Britt Borregaard3,4,5, Jennifer Baumbusch2, Jonathan Afilalo6, David A Wood1, Jacqueline Forman1,2, Anson Cheung1, Jian Ye1, John G Webb1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Frailty is an important consideration in the assessment of transcatheter aortic valve implantation patients. The documentation of a patient photograph to augment the objective measurement of frailty has been adopted by some transcatheter aortic valve implantation multidisciplinary (TAVI) programmes.
METHODS: We used a prospective two-part multimethod study design. In part A, we examined the concordance between the Essential Frailty Toolset (EFT) and the score attributed by healthcare professionals based on visual rating of photographs using kappa estimates and linear regression. In part B, we conducted a content analysis qualitative study to elicit information about how the TAVI multidisciplinary team used photographs to form impressions about frailty.
FINDINGS: Part A: 94 healthcare professionals (registered nurses/allied health 65%; physicians 35%) rated 40 representative photographs (women 42.5%; mean age 83.4±7.5; mobility aid 40%) between 0 (robust) and 5 (very frail). The estimate of weighted kappa was 0.2575 (95% confidence interval 0.082-0.433), indicating fair agreement between median healthcare professional visual and EFT score, especially when the EFT was 1 or 4. There was significant discordance among raters (kappa estimate 0.110, 95% confidence interval 0.079-0.141). Age, sex and mobility aid did not have a significant effect on score discordance. Part B: 12 members of the TAVI multidisciplinary team (registered nurses 27.5%; physicians 72.5%) were shown a series of six representative patient photographs. The following themes emerged from the data: (a) looking at the outside; (b) thinking about the inside; (c) use but with caution; and (d) a better approach.
CONCLUSION: A patient photograph offers complementary information to the multimodality assessment of TAVI patients. © The European Society of Cardiology 2020.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Transcatheter aortic valve implantation; clinical pathway; frailty; multidisciplinary team; patient photograph

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33611409     DOI: 10.1177/1474515120953739

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Cardiovasc Nurs        ISSN: 1474-5151            Impact factor:   3.908


  2 in total

1.  Association between frailty and self-reported health following heart valve surgery.

Authors:  Britt Borregaard; Jordi S Dahl; Sandra B Lauck; Jesper Ryg; Selina K Berg; Ola Ekholm; Jeroen M Hendriks; Lars P S Riber; Tone M Norekvål; Jacob E Møller
Journal:  Int J Cardiol Heart Vasc       Date:  2020-11-13

2.  A "snap-shot" visual estimation of health and objectively measured frailty: capturing general health in aging older women.

Authors:  Patrik Bartosch; Linnea Malmgren; Paul Gerdhem; Jimmie Kristensson; Fiona Elizabeth McGuigan; Kristina Eva Akesson
Journal:  Aging Clin Exp Res       Date:  2022-03-25       Impact factor: 4.481

  2 in total

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