Frailty in Older Adults Using Pre-hospital Care and the Emergency Department: A Narrative Review

Authors

  • Judah Goldstein Dalhousie University
  • Melissa K. Andrew Dalhousie University
  • Andrew Travers Emergency Health Services Nova Scotia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5770/cgj.15.27

Keywords:

frailty, Emergency Medical Services, frail elderly, aged

Abstract

Background

Older adults use more health-care services per capita than younger age groups and the older adult population varies greatly in its needs. Evidence suggests that there is a critical distinction between relative frailty and fitness in older adults. Here, we review how frailty is described in the pre-hospital literature and in the broader emergency medicine literature.

Methods

PubMed was used as the primary database, but was augmented by searches of CINAHL and EMBASE. Articles were included if they focused on patients 60 years and older and implemented a definition of frailty or risk screening tool in the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) or Emergency Department setting.

Results

In the broad clinical literature, three types of measures can be identified: frailty index measures, frailty scales, and a phenotypic definition. Each offers advantages and disadvantages for the EMS stakeholder. We identified no EMS literature on frailty conceptualization or management, although some risk measures from emergency medicine use terms that overlap with the frailty literature.

Conclusions

There is a paucity of research on frailty in the Emergency Medical Services literature. No research was identified that specifically addressed frailty conceptualization or management in EMS patients. There is a compelling need for further research in this area.

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Published

2012-02-15

How to Cite

1.
Goldstein J, Andrew MK, Travers A. Frailty in Older Adults Using Pre-hospital Care and the Emergency Department: A Narrative Review. Can Geriatr J [Internet]. 2012 Feb. 15 [cited 2024 Mar. 29];15(1):16-22. Available from: https://cgjonline.ca/index.php/cgj/article/view/27

Issue

Section

Systematic Reviews/Meta-analysis