New horizons in frailty identification via electronic frailty indices: early implementation lessons from experiences in England and the United States

Author:

Orkaby Ariela R1234,Callahan Kathryn E56,Driver Jane A1234,Hudson Kristian7,Clegg Andrew J8,Pajewski Nicholas M910

Affiliation:

1. New England Geriatric Research , Education, and Clinical Center (GRECC), , Boston, MA , USA

2. VA Boston Healthcare System , Education, and Clinical Center (GRECC), , Boston, MA , USA

3. Division of Aging , Department of Medicine, , Boston, MA , USA

4. Brigham & Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School , Department of Medicine, , Boston, MA , USA

5. Section on Geriatrics and Gerontologic Medicine , Department of Internal Medicine, , Winston-Salem, NC , USA

6. Wake Forest University School of Medicine , Department of Internal Medicine, , Winston-Salem, NC , USA

7. The Improvement Academy, Bradford Institute for Health Research , Bradford , UK

8. Academic Unit for Ageing & Stroke Research, University of Leeds, Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust , Bradford , UK

9. Department of Biostatistics and Data Science , Division of Public Health Sciences, , Winston-Salem, NC , USA

10. Wake Forest University School of Medicine , Division of Public Health Sciences, , Winston-Salem, NC , USA

Abstract

Abstract Frailty represents an integrative prognostic marker of risk that associates with a myriad of age-related adverse outcomes in older adults. As a concept, frailty can help to target scarce resources and identify subgroups of vulnerable older adults that may benefit from interventions or changes in medical management, such as pursing less aggressive glycaemic targets for frail older adults with diabetes. In practice, however, there are several operational challenges to implementing frailty screening outside the confines of geriatric medicine. Electronic frailty indices (eFIs) based on the theory of deficit accumulation, derived from routine data housed in the electronic health record, have emerged as a rapid, feasible and valid approach to screen for frailty at scale. The goal of this paper is to describe the early experience of three diverse groups in developing, implementing and adopting eFIs (The English National Health Service, US Department of Veterans Affairs and Atrium Health—Wake Forest Baptist). These groups span different countries and organisational complexity, using eFIs for both research and clinical care, and represent different levels of progress with clinical implementation. Using an implementation science framework, we describe common elements of successful implementation in these settings and set an agenda for future research and expansion of eFI-informed initiatives.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

VA CSR&D CDA-2

NIA

National Institute for Health and Care Research

NIHR Leeds Biomedical Research Centre and Health Data Research UK

UK Research and Innovation Councils

NIHR

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference53 articles.

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