Dissecting the Racial/Ethnic Disparity in Frailty in a Nationally Representative Cohort Study with Respect to Health, Income, and Measurement

Author:

Usher Therri1,Buta Brian23ORCID,Thorpe Roland J1234,Huang Jin23,Samuel Laura J35,Kasper Judith D1,Bandeen-Roche Karen1235

Affiliation:

1. Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland

2. School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland

3. Johns Hopkins Center on Aging and Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland

4. Hopkins Center for Health Disparities Solutions, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland

5. School of Nursing, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland

Abstract

Abstract Background Racial/ethnic frailty prevalence disparities have been documented. Better elucidating how these operate may inform interventions to eliminate them. We aimed to determine whether physical frailty phenotype (PFP) prevalence disparities (i) are explained by health aspects, (ii) vary by income, or (iii) differ in degree across individual PFP criteria. Methods Data came from the 2011 National Health and Aging Trends Study baseline evaluation. The study sample (n = 7,439) included persons in all residential settings except nursing homes. Logistic regression was used to achieve aims (i)–(iii) listed above. In (i), health aspects considered were body mass index (BMI) status and number of chronic diseases. Analyses incorporated sampling weights and adjusted for sociodemographic factors. Results Comparisons are versus non-Hispanic whites: Non-Hispanic blacks (odds ratio [OR] = 1.46, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.21–1.76) and Hispanics (1.56, 1.20–2.03) continued to have higher odds of frailty after accounting for BMI status and number of chronic diseases. Non-Hispanic blacks had elevated odds of frailty in all income quartiles, including the highest (OR = 2.19, 1.24–3.397). Racial/ethnic disparities differed considerably across frailty criteria, ranging from a twofold increase in odds of slowness to a 25%–30% decrease in odds of self-reported exhaustion. Conclusions BMI and disease burden do not explain racial/ethnic frailty disparities. Black–white disparities are not restricted to low-income groups. Racial/ethnic differences vary considerably by NHATS PFP criteria. Our findings support the need to better understand mechanisms underlying elevated frailty burden in older non-Hispanic black and Hispanic Americans, how phenotypic measures capture frailty in racial/ethnic subgroups and, potentially, how to create assessments more comparable by race/ethnicity.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging

Reference23 articles.

1. Frailty in older adults: a nationally representative profile in the United States;Bandeen-Roche;J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci.,2015

2. The association of race with frailty: the cardiovascular health study;Hirsch;Ann Epidemiol.,2006

3. Socioeconomic status is associated with frailty: the Women’s Health and Aging Studies;Szanton;J Epidemiol Community Health.,2010

4. Frailty in older Mexican-American and European-American adults: is there an ethnic disparity?;Espinoza;J of the Am Geriatr Soc.,2008

5. Understanding and addressing racial disparities in health care;Williams;Health Care Finance Rev.,2000

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