Frailty assessment tools in the emergency department: A geriatric emergency department guidelines 2.0 scoping review

Author:

Wolf Lisa A.1,Lo Alexander X.2ORCID,Serina Peter3,Chary Anita4,Sri‐On Jiraporn5,Shankar Kalpana6,Sano Ellen7,Liu Shan W.8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Emergency Nurses Association Schaumburg Illinois USA

2. Department of Emergency Medicine Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine Chicago Illinois USA

3. Department of Emergency Medicine Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA

4. Department of Emergency Medicine Baylor College of Medicine Houston Texas USA

5. Department of Emergency Medicine Vajira Hospital Bangkok Thailand

6. Department of Emergency Medicine Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

7. Department of Emergency Medicine Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons New York New York USA

8. Department of Emergency Medicine Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveGiven the aging population and growing burden of frailty, we conducted this scoping review to describe the available literature regarding the use and impact of frailty assessment tools in the assessment and care of emergency department (ED) patients older than 60 years.MethodsA search was made of the available literature using the Covidence system using various search terms. Inclusion criteria comprised peer‐reviewed literature focusing on frailty screening tools used for a geriatric population (60+ years of age) presenting to EDs. An additional search of PubMed, EBSCO, and CINAHL for articles published in the last 5 years was conducted toward the end of the review process (January 2023) to search specifically for literature describing interventions for frailty, yielding additional articles for review. Exclusion criteria comprised articles focusing on an age category other than geriatric and care environments outside the emergency care setting.ResultsA total of 135 articles were screened for inclusion and 48 duplicates were removed. Of the 87 remaining articles, 20 were deemed irrelevant, leaving 67 articles for full‐text review. Twenty‐eight were excluded for not meeting inclusion criteria, leaving 39 full‐text studies. Use of frailty screening tools were reported in the triage, care, and discharge decision‐making phases of the ED care trajectory, with varying reports of usefulness for clinical decision‐making.ConclusionThe literature reports tools, scales, and instruments for identifying frailty in older patients at ED triage; multiple frailty scores or tools exist with varying levels of utilization. Interventions for frailty directed at the ED environment were scant. Further research is needed to determine the usefulness of frailty identification in the context of emergency care, the effects of care delivery interventions or educational initiatives for front‐line medical professionals on patient‐oriented outcomes, and to ensure these initiatives are acceptable for patients.

Funder

John A. Hartford Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Emergency Medicine

Reference57 articles.

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2. HeW GoodkindD KowalP.International Population Reports.US Census Bureau.https://www.nia.nih.gov/sites/default/files/d7/p95‐12‐01.pdf

3. Frailty measurement in research and clinical practice: A review

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