Phenotype of Frailty: Characterization in the Women's Health and Aging Studies
Abstract
"Frailty" is an adverse, primarily gerontologic, health condition regarded as frequent with aging and having severe consequences. Although clinicians claim that the extremes of frailty can be easily recognized, a standardized definition of frailty has proved elusive until recently. This article evaluates the cross-validity, criterion validity, and internal validity in the Women's Health and Aging Studies (WHAS) of a discrete measure of frailty recently validated in the Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS).
The frailty measure developed in CHS was delineated in the WHAS data sets. Using latent class analysis, we evaluated whether criteria composing the measure aggregate into a syndrome. We verified the criterion validity of the measure by testing whether participants defined as frail were more likely than others to develop adverse geriatric outcomes or to die.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.77
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Authors
8Topics & keywords
- Confounding
- Gerontology
- Internal validity
- Medicine
- Institutionalisation
- Frailty syndrome
- Activities of daily living
- External validity