This prospective observational study will investigate the correlation of a surrogate marker of frailty in relation to serious outcomes. Serious outcomes are defined as: mortality within 30 days, admission to hospital, length of stay in the Emergency Department (ED), in-hospital Length of Stay and revisits to the ED. The exposure, frailty, will be assessed according to Loss of Independence (LOI) a possible low-cost quick tool to identify frailty in patients. The study population will be ED patients, \>65 years of age in a Swedish regional health care system (Region Östergötland, Sweden), comprising three EDs in Linköping, Norrköping and Motala. The outcomes will be compared according to the degree of frailty and censored over 7, 30 and 90 days.
Frailty is a common clinical syndrome in older adults that carries an increased risk for poor health outcomes including falls, incident disability, hospitalization and mortality. The Loss of Independence (LOI) defined as inability to rise from a chair with or without existing aids, is a possible low cost surrogate marker to measure frailty. Several studies on triage scores for predicting mortality and need of hospital admission have identified LOI as one of the most important variables. LOI was prognostic in ED populations regarding mortality within 1-30 days in Denmark, Ireland and Tanzania. Data from the American College of Surgeons (ACS) National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) Geriatric Surgery Pilot Project showed that LOI was associated with higher rates of readmission and death after discharge in geriatric patients undergoing surgical procedures6. The aim of this study will be to investigate if the frailty, as assessed with LOI, is associated with increased 30-day mortality in a Swedish ED context. Secondary outcomes include 7- and 90-day mortality, ED-length of stay, hospital admission, in-hospital length of stay, subsequent falls and medication changes. Additionally, we collect data on morbidity and comorbidities to assess the association with the level of frailty. Since this is a multicentre study, possible geographic differences will be studied as well. Based on the results of this study, possible interventions could be identified to improve the care of the frail geriatric patients presenting at the ED.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1,800
University Hospital Linköping
Linköping, Östergötland County, Sweden
Medicinska Specialist Kliniken i Motala
Motala, Östergötland County, Sweden
Vrinnevisjukhuset i Norrköping
Norrköping, Östergötland County, Sweden
Mortality in 30 Days
Investigate level of mortality in cohort at 30 days
Time frame: All cause mortality up to 30 days from index visit
Mortality in 7 and 90 days
Investigate level of mortality in cohort at 7 and 90 days
Time frame: All cause mortality up to 90 days from index visit
Admission to hospital
Investigate level of all cause admissions in cohort
Time frame: Hospital admission on index visit, censored at 90 days
ED length of stay
Investigate length of stay at ED
Time frame: Length of stay at ED, censored at 4 days
In-hospital length of stay
Investigate in-hospital length of stay
Time frame: In-hospital length of stay from index visit, censored at 90 days
Revisits to the ED
Number of newly registered visits to the ED after index visit
Time frame: Number of newly registered visits to the ED after index visit, censored at 90 days
Fall prevalence after index visit
Falls that resulted in further health care contacts
Time frame: Falls that resulted in further health care contacts after index visit, censored at 90 days
Alterations in medication during the visit
Alterations in medication during the ED visit and during the follow-up period(based on codes for Anatomical, Therapeutic, Chemical classification (ATC-code)
Time frame: Alterations in medication during the ED visit and during the follow-up period, censored at 90 days
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