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A bio-psycho-social approach for frailty amongst Singaporean Chinese community-dwelling older adults - evidence from the Singapore Longitudinal Aging Study.

Authors :
Teo, Nigel
Yeo, Pei Shi
Gao, Qi
Nyunt, Ma Shwe Zin
Foo, Jie Jing
Wee, Shiou Liang
Ng, Tze Pin
Source :
BMC Geriatrics; 12/12/2019, Vol. 19 Issue 1, p1-14, 14p, 1 Diagram, 5 Charts
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Few empirical studies support a bio-psycho-social conceptualization of frailty. In addition to physical frailty (PF), we explored mental (MF) and social (SF) frailty and studied the associations between multidimensional frailty and various adverse health outcomes.<bold>Methods: </bold>Cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses were conducted using data from a population-based cohort (SLAS-1) of 2387 community-dwelling Singaporean Chinese older adults. Outcomes examined were functional and severe disability, nursing home referral and mortality. PF was defined by shrinking, weakness, slowness, exhaustion and physical inactivity, 1-2 = pre-frail, 3-5 = frail; MF was defined by ≥1 of cognitive impairment, low mood and poor self-reported health; SF was defined by ≥2 of living alone, no education, no confidant, infrequent social contact or help, infrequent social activities, financial difficulty and living in low-end public housing.<bold>Results: </bold>The prevalence of any frailty dimension was 63.0%, dominated by PF (26.2%) and multidimensional frailty (24.2%); 7.0% had all three frailty dimensions. With a few exceptions, frailty dimensions share similar associations with many socio-demographic, lifestyle, health and behavioral factors. Each frailty dimension varied in showing independent associations with functional (Odds Ratios [ORs] = 1.3-1.8) and severe disability prevalence at baseline (ORs = 2.2-7.3), incident functional disability (ORs = 1.1-1.5), nursing home referral (ORs = 1.5-3.4) and mortality (Hazard Ratios = 1.3-1.5) after adjusting for age, gender, medical comorbidity and the two other frailty dimensions. The addition of MF and SF to PF incrementally increased risk estimates by more than 2 folds.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>This study highlights the relevance and utility of PF, MF and SF individually and together. Multidimensional frailty can better inform policies and promote the use of targeted multi-domain interventions tailored to older adults' frailty statuses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712318
Volume :
19
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
BMC Geriatrics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
140312573
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-019-1367-9