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Stolz, E; Schultz, A; Mayerl, H; Roller-Wirnsberger, R; Andrew, C.
Revisiting unstable disability and the fluctuations of frailty: a measurement burst approach.
Age Ageing. 2024; 53(8):
Doi: 10.1093/ageing/afae170
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- Leading authors Med Uni Graz
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Stolz Erwin
- Co-authors Med Uni Graz
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Mayerl Hannes
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Roller-Wirnsberger Regina
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Schultz Anna Theresia
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- Abstract:
- BACKGROUND: It has been hypothesised that frailty is the root cause of clinically observed but rarely systematically measured unstable disability among older adults. In this study, we measure the extent of short-term disability fluctuations and estimate their association with frailty using intensive longitudinal data. METHODS: Repeated measurements of disability were collected under a measurement burst design in the FRequent health Assessment In Later life (FRAIL70+) study. A total of 426 community-dwelling older adults (70+) in Austria were interviewed about difficulties with basic, instrumental and mobility-related activities of daily living biweekly up to a total of 14 times in two measurement bursts (2891 and 2192 observations). Baseline frailty was assessed with both physical frailty (FP) and the frailty index (FI). Disability fluctuations were measured with the intra-individual interquartile range (iIQR) and estimated with a two-step generalised mixed regression procedure. RESULTS: Fewer participants were frail at baseline according to FP (11%) than FI (32%). Frail study participants reported not only more severe disability but also had more short-term disability fluctuations (iIQR = 1.0-1.5) compared with their robust counterparts (iIQR = 0). Regression models indicated that baseline frailty was associated with 2-3 times larger short-term disability fluctuations, which were also more prevalent among women, and increased with age and disability severity. CONCLUSION: Compared with those who were robust, frail older adults were characterised by not only more severe but also more unstable disability. Short-term disability fluctuations are closely tied to disability severity. Future studies should assess both stressors that may cause disability fluctuations among frail older adults as well as their potential consequences to inform frailty-centred care.
- Find related publications in this database (using NLM MeSH Indexing)
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Humans - administration & dosage
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Aged - administration & dosage
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Female - administration & dosage
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Male - administration & dosage
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Geriatric Assessment - methods
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Frailty - diagnosis, physiopathology, epidemiology
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Frail Elderly - statistics & numerical data
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Disability Evaluation - administration & dosage
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Aged, 80 and over - administration & dosage
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Activities of Daily Living - administration & dosage
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Longitudinal Studies - administration & dosage
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Austria - epidemiology
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Independent Living - administration & dosage
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Age Factors - administration & dosage
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Aging - psychology
- Find related publications in this database (Keywords)
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disability
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frailty
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short-term fluctuations
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intra-individual variability
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measurement burst design
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older people