| Literature DB >> 34315291 |
Jananee Rasiah1,2, Tammy O'Rourke2,3, Brian Dompé3, Darryl Rolfson1, Beth Mansell3, Rachel Pereira3, Titus Chan3, Karen McDonald3, Anne Summach1,3.
Abstract
Coordination of primary care is essential to improving care delivery within health systems, especially for older adults with increased health/social needs. A program jointly funded by the Canadian Foundation for Healthcare Improvement and Canadian Frailty Network, was implemented in a nurse practitioner-led clinic to address the gap in frailty care for older adults. The clinic was situated within a health and social services organization with a mandate to enhance the quality of life of older adults living in the community. Through this program, a frailty assessment pathway and social/clinical prescriptions were implemented with necessary adaptations as a result of COVID-19.Entities:
Keywords: frailty; health promotion; older adults; pilot; primary care; social needs
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34315291 PMCID: PMC8323414 DOI: 10.1177/21501327211034807
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Prim Care Community Health ISSN: 2150-1319
Figure 1.DRAGONFLY program.
Figure 2.Assessment pathway.
Adapted CFS Items.
| Screening CFS statement | Score |
|---|---|
| I am terminally ill and at the end of my life | 9 |
| I am completely dependent for all of my personal care | 8 |
| I need help with all of my personal care | 7 |
| I need assistance with out of home activities, require help with bathing or medications, or struggle with stairs | 6 |
| I need physical or practical assistance with finances, transportation, or heavy housework | 5 |
| I am more tired than I used to be, and have more trouble obtaining supports than before, but can still coordinate things myself | 4 |
| My health conditions are well managed, but I am generally inactive. I may require advice on how to obtain supports with finances, transportation, or heavy housework | 3 |
| I am well, but only occasionally active. I can manage finances, transportation, and heavy housework on my own | 2 |
| I am active, energetic, and exercise regularly | 1 |
Figure 3.Intervention pathway.
Descriptive Statistics for CFS and RVAT.
| Age groups | CFS | RVAT | RVAT | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intake (N = 61) | Intake (N = 54) | 3-Month Follow-up (N = 35) | |||||||||||||
| N | Mean | SD | Variance | IR | N | Mean | SD | Variance | IR | N | Mean | SD | Variance | IR | |
| 50-64 years | 13 | 4.62 | 0.77 | 0.59 | 1 | 12 | 19.67 | 9.54 | 90.97 | 16 | 7 | 17.00 | 7.96 | 63.33 | 12 |
| 65-79 years | 35 | 4.63 | 0.77 | 0.59 | 1 | 31 | 17.06 | 6.26 | 39.20 | 7 | 22 | 16.00 | 3.98 | 15.81 | 6 |
| 80-94 years | 13 | 4.92 | 0.86 | 0.74 | 2 | 11 | 15.18 | 3.66 | 13.36 | 6 | 6 | 12.83 | 3.97 | 15.77 | 6 |
Abbreviations: SD, standard deviation; IR, interquartile range.
CFS* score between 4 and 6 indicative of vulnerable to moderate levels of frailty.
Figure 4.RVAT scores per age group.
Figure 5.Distribution of RVAT scores.
Social and Clinical Prescriptions at Intake and Follow-up.
| Social prescriptions | Referrals (n) | Clinical prescriptions | Referrals (n) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing and financial assistance | 45 | NP services | 31 |
| Home supports | 27 | Mental health services | 23 |
| Virtual programming and life enrichment | 63 | Primary care provider attachment | 18 |
| Safe house for elder abuse | 3 | Health navigation | 13 |
| Transportation services | 10 | Physiotherapy | 10 |
| LGBTQ2S+ programming | 1 | Referral to primary care provider | 5 |
| Caregiver supports | 5 | Community geriatric psychiatric services | 7 |
| Support groups | 1 | Pharmacist | 3 |
| Hoarding supports | 1 | Home care | 3 |
| Multicultural health brokers’ services | 1 | ||
| Volunteer services | 3 |