Abstract
Abstract
Background
The Frailty In Residential Sector over Time (FIRST) Study is a 3-year prospective cohort study investigating the health of residents living in residential aged care services (RACS) in South Australia. The study aims to examine the change in frailty status and associated health outcomes.
Methods
This interim report presents data from March 2019–October 2020. The study setting is 12 RACS from one organisation across metropolitan and rural South Australia involving 1243 residents. All permanent (i.e. respite or transition care program excluded) residents living in the RACS for at least 8 weeks were invited to participate. Residents who were deemed to be medically unstable (e.g. experiencing delirium), have less than 3 months to live, or not fluent in English were excluded. Data collected included frailty status, medical diagnoses, medicines, pain, nutrition, sarcopenia, falls, dementia, anxiety and depression, sleep quality, quality of life, satisfaction with care, activities of daily living, and life space use at baseline and 12-months. Data Linkage will occur over the 3 years from baseline.
Results
A total of 561 permanent residents (mean age 87.69 ± 7.25) were included. The majority of residents were female (n = 411, 73.3%) with 95.3% (n = 527) being classified as either frail (n = 377, 68.2%) or most-frail (n = 150, 27.1%) according to the Frailty Index (FI). Most residents were severely impaired in their basic activities of daily living (n = 554, 98.8%), and were at-risk of malnutrition (n = 305, 55.0%) and at-risk of sarcopenia (n = 492, 89.5%). Most residents did not experience pain (n = 475, 85.4%), had normal daytime sleepiness (n = 385, 69.7%), and low anxiety and depression scores (n = 327, 58.9%).
Conclusion
This study provides valuable information on the health and frailty levels of residents living in RACS in South Australia. The results will assist in developing interventions that can help to improve the health and wellbeing of residents in aged care services.
Trial registration
Prospectively registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12619000500156).
Funder
South Australian Department for Innovation and Skills to the Healthy Aging Research Consortium
Hospital Research Foundation
National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia through the Centre of Research Excellence Scheme
GTRAC- Resthaven Research Grants Scheme
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Geriatrics and Gerontology
Reference46 articles.
1. Xue QL. The frailty syndrome: definition and natural history. Clin Geriatr Med. 2011;27(1):1–15.
2. Simpson KN, Seamon BA, Hand BN, Roldan CO, Taber DJ, Moran WP, et al. Effect of frailty on resource use and cost for Medicare patients. J Comp Eff Res. 2018;7(8):817–25.
3. Theou O, Sluggett JK, Bell JS, Lalic S, Cooper T, Robson L, et al. Frailty, hospitalization, and mortality in residential aged care. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2018;73(8):1090–6.
4. Taylor D, Barrie H, Lange J, et al. Geospatial modelling of the prevalence and changing distribution of frailty in Australia - 2011 to 2027. Exp Gerontol. 2019;123:57–65.
5. Commonwealth of Australia, Department of Health. Legislated review of aged care; 2017. https://www.health.gov.au/resources/publications/legislated-review-of-aged-care-2017-report. Accessed 04 Dec 2020.
Cited by
27 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献