Abstract

BackgroundRegarding the health care of older populations, WHO recommends shifting from disease-driven attention models towards a personalized, integrated and continuous care aimed to the maintenance and enhancement of functional capacities. Impairments in the construct of functional intrinsic capacity have been understood as the condition of frailty or vulnerability. No consensus has been yet reached regarding which tools are the most suitable for screening this kind of patients in primary care settings. Tools based on the measurement of functional performance such as Timed up and go test (TUG), Short Physical Performance battery (SPPB), self-completed questionnaires like Tilburg Frailty Indicator (TFI) and clinical judgement, as the Gerontopole Frailty Scale (GFS) may be adequate. The objective of this work is to describe and compare characteristics of community-dwelling individuals identified as vulnerable or frail by four tools applied in primary care settings.MethodsCross sectional analysis developed in primary care services in two regions of Spain.Community-dwelling independent individuals aged 70 or more willing to participate were recruited and data was collected via face-to-face interviews. Frailty was assessed by TUG, SPPB, TFI and GFST. Also socio-demographic characteristics, lifestyle habits and health status data (comorbidities, polypharmacy, self-perceived health), were collected. Multiple correspondence analysis (MCA) and cluster analysis were used to identify groups of individuals with similar characteristics.ResultsEight hundred sixty-five individuals were recruited, 53% women, with a mean age of 78 years. Four clusters of participants emerge. Cluster 1 (N = 263) contained patients categorized as robust by most of the studied tools, whereas clusters 2 (N = 199), 3 (N = 183) and 4 (N = 220) grouped patients classified as frail or vulnerable by at least one of the tools. Significant differences were found between clusters.ConclusionsThe assessed tools identify different profiles of patients according to their theoretical construct of frailty. There is a group of patients that are identified by TUG and SPPB but not by GFS or TFI. These tools may be useful in primary care settings for the implementation of a function- driven clinical care of older patients.

Highlights

  • Regarding the health care of older populations, World Health Organization (WHO) recommends shifting from disease-driven attention models towards a personalized, integrated and continuous care aimed to the maintenance and enhancement of functional capacities

  • In all tools except for the Gérontopôle Frailty Screening Tool (GFST), significant differences were observed by sex, the prevalence being higher in women

  • The Tilburg Frailty Indicator (TFI) was considered because it appeared to be potentially relevant for the screening of frailty in primary care [52] and because its method of data collection is easy to use in primary care

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Summary

Introduction

Regarding the health care of older populations, WHO recommends shifting from disease-driven attention models towards a personalized, integrated and continuous care aimed to the maintenance and enhancement of functional capacities. Impairments in the construct of functional intrinsic capacity have been understood as the condition of frailty or vulnerability. No consensus has been yet reached regarding which tools are the most suitable for screening this kind of patients in primary care settings. It shifts from a diseasedriven attention towards a healthy ageing idea [2]; the latter being characterized by a personalized, integrated and continuous care aimed at the maintenance and enhancement of functional capacities regardless of clinical phenotypes. Impairments in the construct of intrinsic capacity have been understood as the condition of frailty [3]. The two most widely accepted models that conceptualise frailty are Fried’s Phenotype [5] and the Cumulative deficit Model of the Canadian Study of Health and Aging (CSHA) [6]

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