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Journal Article

Citation

Chen LK, Hwang AC, Liu LK, Lee WJ, Peng LN. J. Fraility Aging 2016; 5(4): 208-213.

Affiliation

Prof Liang-Kung Chen, Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology, Taipei Veterans General Hospital, No 201, Sec 2, Shih-Pai Road, Taipei, Taiwan, TEL: +886-2-28757830, FAX: +886-2-28757711, Email: lkchen2@vghtpe.gov.tw.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Journal of frailty and aging)

DOI

10.14283/jfa.2016.109

PMID

27883167

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the prevalence of frailty and the associated multimorbidity and functional impairments among community-dwelling middle-aged and elderly people in Taiwan.

DESIGN: a cross-sectional study. SETTING: communities in I-Lan County of Taiwan. PARTICIPANTS: 1839 community-dwelling people aged 50 years and older. INTERVENTION: None. MEASUREMENTS: Frailty defined by Fried's criteria, Charlson's comorbidity index (CCI), Functional Autonomy Measurement System (SMAF), Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D), Mini-Nutrition Assessment (MNA), Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), and Short Form-12 quality of life questionnaire.

RESULTS: Overall, 1839 subjects (mean age: 63.9±9.3 years, 47.5% males) participated in this study and men were more likely to have higher educational level, more smoking and alcohol drinking habit. The prevalence of frailty was 6.8% in this study, while pre-frailty was 40.5% and 53.7% of all participants were robust. Compared to subjects with different frailty status, age, education year, alcohol drinking, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, CCI, walking speed, handgrip strength, score of SMAF, CES-D, MNA, MMSE, quality of life were significantly different between groups (P all< 0.05). Older age, poorer physical function, poorer cognitive function, poorer nutritional status, more depressive symptoms, higher CCI and poorer quality of life were all independently associated with frailty.

CONCLUSIONS: Frailty was not simply a geriatric syndrome, but the combination of multiple geriatric syndromes. Further study is needed to evaluate the clinical benefits of intervention programs for community-dwelling middle-aged and older people to reverse frailty and its associated functional impairments.


Language: en

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