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- Stephane Rochat, Robert G Cumming, Fiona Blyth, Helen Creasey, David Handelsman, David G Le Couteur, Vasi Naganathan, Philip N Sambrook, Markus J Seibel, and Louise Waite.
- Service of Geriatric Medicine & Geriatric Rehabilitation, University of Lausanne Hospital Center, Lausanne, Switzerland.
- Age Ageing. 2010 Mar 1;39(2):228-33.
Backgroundfrailty is a concept used to describe older people at high risk of adverse outcomes, including falls, functional decline, hospital or nursing home admission and death. The associations between frailty and use of specific health and community services have not been investigated.Methodsthe cross-sectional relationship between frailty and use of several health and community services in the last 12 months was investigated in 1,674 community-dwelling men aged 70 or older in the Concord Health and Ageing in Men study, a population-based study conducted in Sydney, Australia. Frailty was assessed using a modified version of the Cardiovascular Health Study criteria.Resultsoverall, 158 (9.4%) subjects were frail, 679 (40.6%) were intermediate (pre-frail) and 837 (50.0%) were robust. Frailty was associated with use of health and community services in the last 12 months, including consulting a doctor, visiting or being visited by a nurse or a physiotherapist, using help with meals or household duties and spending at least one night in a hospital or nursing home. Frail men without disability in activities of daily living were twice more likely to have seen a doctor in the previous 2 weeks than robust men (adjusted odds ratio 2.04, 95% confidence interval 1.21-3.44), independent of age, comorbidity and socio-economic status.Conclusionfrailty is strongly associated with use of health and community services in community-dwelling older men. The high level of use of medical services suggests that doctors and nurses could play a key role in implementation of preventive interventions.
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