Abstract

PurposeFrailty is an important predictor of adverse health events in older people, and improving quality of life (QOL) is increasingly recognised as a focus for services in this population. This systematic review synthesised evidence of the relationship between frailty and QOL in community-dwelling older people, with an emphasis on how this relationship varied across QOL domains.MethodsWe conducted a systematic review with meta-analysis. We searched five databases for reports of QOL in older people with frailty and included studies based on pre-defined criteria. We conducted meta-analyses comparing “frail” and “not frail” groups for each QOL scale where data were available. We compared pooled results to distribution-based and known-group differences to enhance interpretation. We summarised reported cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses.ResultsTwenty-two studies (24,419 participants) were included. There were medium or larger standardised mean differences for 24 of 31 QOL scales between frail and not frail groups, with worse QOL for frail groups. These scales encompassed constructs of health-related quality of life as well as psychological and subjective well-being. There were similar findings from mean difference meta-analyses and within-study analyses.ConclusionsThe association between frailty and lower QOL across a range of constructs is clear and often substantial. Future research should establish whether causal mechanisms link the constructs, which aspects of QOL are most important to older people with frailty, and investigate their tractability. Services focused on measuring and improving QOL for older people with frailty should be introduced.

Highlights

  • Enhancing Quality of Life (QOL) has been an explicit or implicit goal for individuals, communities, nations and the world [1]

  • For one group of participants, we present the results as two separate studies, as differing frailty instruments, age limits and timepoints were used [29, 30]

  • To investigate the QOL of community-dwelling older people with frailty, we systematically reviewed the literature and identified 22 observational studies (24,419 participants) that met our broad inclusion criteria

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Summary

Introduction

Enhancing Quality of Life (QOL) has been an explicit or implicit goal for individuals, communities, nations and the world [1]. QOL is a complex concept and its precise formulation is contested [1,2,3]. It is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as: “An individual’s perceptions of their position in life, in the context of the culture and value systems in which they live, and in relation to their goals, expectations, standards and concerns” [4]. The global demographic transition to older populations has meant health care organisations internationally have adopted a greater focus on enhancing QOL for older people [5]. QOL measures can help estimate the needs of a population

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