Frailty in Older Adults: A Nationally Representative Profile in the United States
Johns Hopkins University · Johns Hopkins Medicine · +1 more institution
Abstract
Frailty assessment provides a means of identifying older adults most vulnerable to adverse outcomes. Attention to frailty in clinical practice is more likely with better understanding of its prevalence and associations with patient characteristics. We sought to provide national estimates of frailty in older people.
A popular, validated frailty phenotype proposed by Fried and colleagues was applied to 7,439 participants in the 2011 baseline of the National Health and Aging Trends Study, a national longitudinal study of persons aged 65 and older. All measures drew on a 2-hour in-person interview. Weighted estimates of frailty prevalence were obtained.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.32
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 33
Authors
9- KBKaren Bandeen‐RocheCorresponding
Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Medicine
- CLChristopher L. Seplaki
University of Rochester
- JHJin Huang
Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Medicine
- BBBrian Buta
Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Medicine
- RRRita R. Kalyani
Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Medicine
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Gerontology
- Public health
- Population
- Ethnic group
- Disease
- Demography
- Environmental health
- No poverty