1.Identification and Measurement of Frailty: A Scoping Review of Published Research from Singapore.
Mary Ann C BAUTISTA ; Rahul MALHOTRA
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2018;47(11):455-491
INTRODUCTION:
The Asia-Pacific Clinical Guidelines for the Management of Frailty recommended the use of validated measurement tools for identifying frailty. In an effort to contribute to the development of best practice guidelines in frailty identification and measurement, our scoping review aimed to present a summary of published research on this topic among older adults in Singapore. Our findings are important given the need to consider the context of use and the goals of measurement in using validation tools.
MATERIALS AND METHODS:
We searched PubMed and CINAHL® for articles describing the identification and measurement of frailty among older adults (≥60 years) in Singapore and mined the bibliographies of eligible articles. An article was eligible if it involved empirical research on frailty using a structured frailty definition. We described such articles and the conceptual definitions they used, and summarized their operationalization of frailty.
RESULTS:
Our search yielded 165 records. After 2-stage screening of titles/abstracts and full-text articles, we retained 32 eligible articles for data extraction and thematic analysis. The extant literature in Singapore includes observational cross-sectional and longitudinal studies and intervention studies across community and tertiary care settings. Eligible articles commonly used the frailty phenotype and the deficit accumulation models in defining frailty, and reported measuring components of physical, cognitive, and/or social frailty.
CONCLUSION
Our scoping review provided a broad evidence synthesis of the underpinnings of research on frailty identification and measurement in Singapore. Consistently applying standard methods and approaches in frailty identification and measurement can support evidence-based practice and policies in Singapore.
Aged
;
Evidence-Based Practice
;
methods
;
standards
;
Frail Elderly
;
Frailty
;
diagnosis
;
Geriatric Assessment
;
methods
;
Humans
;
Singapore
2.Association of the FRAIL scale with rehabilitation outcomes in the community hospital setting.
Jeffrey JIANG ; Audrey Yan YI HAN ; Joel GOH
Singapore medical journal 2022;63(10):585-592
INTRODUCTION:
Frailty is associated with adverse health outcomes and can be measured using the FRAIL scale. In Singapore, its use has been studied in tertiary hospitals but not in community hospitals. A tool to predict rehabilitation outcomes would allow for better risk stratification and allocation of resources. We aimed to determine whether the FRAIL scale is associated with rehabilitation outcomes in patients admitted to the community hospital setting, where post-acute care and rehabilitation are primarily delivered.
METHODS:
This was a retrospective cohort study. The FRAIL scale was utilised to screen 560 older adults who were admitted to a community hospital for rehabilitation. Data were analysed to determine the relationship between baseline characteristics and frailty status, with rehabilitation outcome measures of absolute functional gain, rehabilitation effectiveness, rehabilitation efficiency, length of stay and discharge destination.
RESULTS:
The combined score of the FRAIL scale showed significant negative association with absolute functional gain (P < 0.001), rehabilitation effectiveness (P < 0.001) and rehabilitation efficiency (P < 0.001), whereas it was positively associated with increased length of stay (P < 0.05) and a need for continued support in increased care settings (P < 0.001). Individual components of the FRAIL scale, in particular, the 'fatigue', 'ambulation' and 'loss of weight' components, appeared to be highly associated with rehabilitation effectiveness and efficiency, especially among pre-frail patients.
CONCLUSION
The utility of the FRAIL scale as an indicator of frailty status and its association with rehabilitative outcomes in the post-acute care setting were demonstrated. Moreover, the FRAIL scale may better predict the rehabilitative progress of pre-frail patients.
Humans
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Aged
;
Frailty/diagnosis*
;
Frail Elderly
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Geriatric Assessment
;
Hospitals, Community
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Retrospective Studies
;
Length of Stay
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Cohort Studies
;
Treatment Outcome