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New frailty index to benefit aged care


Monday, 24 August, 2020

New frailty index to benefit aged care

A new frailty index is set to improve aged-care and health outcomes in vulnerable older Australians.

Developed and validated by the SAHMRI-based (ROSA), the frailty index project was led by ROSA and Research Fellow Dr Jyoti Khadka, who explained that the ability to measure frailty at a population level should deliver broad benefits across the aged-care sector.

鈥淭his index can accurately predict an individual鈥檚 risk of death and the likelihood that they might need long-term residential aged care,鈥 Dr Khadka said.

鈥淭his is extremely important information because frailty can be treated or prevented. Identifying risk enables timely treatment through relatively simple means such as diet and physical and mental exercises.鈥

Medically, frailty is defined as a state of increased weakness and vulnerability to adverse health outcomes including falls, injuries, dependency, hospitalisation, institutionalisation and death.

Fellow research team member Professor Renuka Visvanathan, a recognised expert in geriatric medicine, said use of the index can be incorporated into the more than 186,000 aged-care eligibility assessments currently performed each year by an aged-care assessment team.

鈥淭he assessment of a person鈥檚 frailty at this important time in their aged-care journey can be used to flag those who might benefit from additional support to lower their risk of adverse events like hospitalisation,鈥 she said.

鈥淭here is increasing interest for assessment programs which use electronic systems such as our Australian aged-care eligibility assessments, which is supported by . This can produce a frailty risk score by the end of an assessment with the older person.鈥

The frailty index was developed using historical data involving more than 900,000 older Australians. The process behind its development is published in the .

Dr Khadka said the index is already proving highly valuable from a research perspective across several ROSA projects.

鈥淔or instance, a study recently published in the journal used the index to demonstrate how frailty changes the risk of death, functional limitation and higher level of aged care following a hip fracture,鈥 he said.

Image credit: 漏stock.adobe.com/au/famveldman

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