Abstract

Background Numerous elderly individuals with multimorbidity and impaired function are admitted in long-term care hospitals (LTCHs) in Korea. In this study, we aimed to describe the frailty status of elderly patients admitted in a LTCH using the FRAIL-NH scale and to identify the clinical relevance of frailty status on clinical outcomes, including death.Methods We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of 100 elderly patients who were hospitalized and died in an LTCH from March 2011 to February 2017. The monthly assessment results obtained from the inpatients’ data set (IDS) were used as main data sources for the 6-item FRAIL-NH scale and frailty index that was composed of 22 newly established items.Results The mean frailty index of the patients included in the analysis (mean age, 81.5±7.2 years; men, 53%) was 0.60 (standard deviation [SD], 0.10; range, 0.28-0.80). The distribution of the FRAIL-NH score in this population was in accordance with the 22-item frailty index, which shows a standardized beta of 0.571 (p<0.001, R=0.572). When the patients were categorized based on the FRAIL-NH score, the mean survival durations of the more fail group (FRAIL-NH >10, n=49) and less frail group (FRAIL-NH ≤10, n=51) were 529.3 days (SD, 453.4) and 888 days (SD, 679.9), respectively. Similarly, the frailty index was associated with earlier mortality.Conclusion Frailty is extremely common in elderly patients admitted in an LTCH and can be easily measured using the FRAIL-NH scale that utilizes the IDS of LTCHs in Korea. Since frailty is associated with earlier mortality, the assessment of frailty status in patients admitted in LTCHs may be helpful in clinical decision-making.

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