Frailty is a better predictor than factors such as age when determining how older adults fare 1 year after receiving critical care, according to a study published in the journal CHEST.

A team led by researchers from the University of Waterloo analyzed data from more than 24,000 community-dwelling older adults receiving home care in Ontario who were subsequently admitted into an intensive-care unit (ICU).

They applied three different measures for baseline frailty and found that an individual’s level of frailty was linked to survival 1 year later. The most frail ICU survivors had only a one in five chance of living to 1 year after discharge, a media release from University of Waterloo explains.

Differentiate Frailty from Disability

Clinical frailty is age-related and characterized by a reduced ability to maintain or restore physical, physiological or cognitive functions when subject to health stressors.

“Our results tell us that baseline frailty can help inform treatment plans and goals of care for older persons with critical illness.”

— Luke Turcotte, first author and a postdoctoral fellow at Waterloo during this research

Turcotte stresses that even though frailty levels could be a key measure when determining who will benefit from critical care, it is important to differentiate between frailty and disability, particularly for individuals with chronic and stable disabilities.

“The concept of frailty relates to age-associated vulnerability, and thus its application needs to be limited to older persons with complex health problems.”

— senior author George Heckman, a professor in the School of Public Health Sciences and Schlegel-UW Research Chair in Geriatric Medicine at the Research Institute for Aging

Previous research had analyzed smaller data sets, with similar conclusions. For this study, the researchers used data from interRAI standardized health assessments, used in home care in almost all of Canada and internationally.

Frailty Could Guide Conversations

The researchers believe the concept of frailty can best be used to guide conversations about advance care planning with home care clients and their families.

“For instance, a frail individual may express the wish to forego ICU care given a poor prognosis,” Heckman adds. “Additional research should focus on post-ICU functional and quality of life outcomes.”

[Source(s): University of Waterloo, EurekAlert]


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