Author:
Ravensbergen Willeke M,Blom Jeanet W,Evers Andrea WM,Numans Mattijs E,de Waal Margot WM,Gussekloo Jacobijn
Abstract
BackgroundElectronic health records (EHRs) are increasingly used for research; however, multicomponent outcome measures such as daily functioning cannot yet be readily extracted.AimTo evaluate whether an electronic frailty index based on routine primary care data can be used as a measure for daily functioning in research with community-dwelling older persons (aged ≥75 years).Design and settingCohort study among participants of the Integrated Systemic Care for Older People (ISCOPE) trial (11 476 eligible; 7285 in observational cohort; 3141 in trial; over-representation of frail people).MethodAt baseline (T0) and after 12 months (T12), daily functioning was measured with the Groningen Activities Restriction Scale (GARS, range 18–72). Electronic frailty index scores (range 0–1) at T0 and T12 were computed from the EHRs. The electronic frailty index (electronic Frailty Index — Utrecht) was tested for responsiveness and compared with the GARS as a gold standard for daily functioning.ResultsIn total, 1390 participants with complete EHR and follow-up data were selected (31.4% male; median age = 81 years, interquartile range = 78–85). The electronic frailty index increased with age, was higher for females, and lower for participants living with a partner. It was responsive after an acute major medical event; however, the correlation between the electronic frailty index and GARS at T0 and over time was limited.ConclusionBecause the electronic frailty index does not reflect daily functioning, further research on new methods to measure daily functioning with routine care data (for example, other proxies) is needed before EHRs can be a useful data source for research with older persons.
Publisher
Royal College of General Practitioners
Cited by
2 articles.
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