Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 4 — Narrative / commentaryPeer-reviewed

Frailty: implications for clinical practice and public health

Emiel O. Hoogendijk, Jonathan Afilalo, Kristine E. Ensrud, Paul Kowal, Graziano Onder, Linda P. Fried

The Lancet · 2019

Read source ↗ All evidence

Summary

This Lancet review synthesises current evidence on frailty as a geriatric syndrome characterised by increased vulnerability to stressors in older populations. The authors appear to discuss aetiological factors, clinical detection methods, and implications for healthcare service organisation and public health policy. As a high-impact narrative review in a leading medical journal, the paper likely emphasises the need for integrated clinical and population-level approaches to frailty recognition and management.

Regional applicability

Highly applicable to UK clinical practice and NHS policy, particularly in the context of an ageing population and pressures on secondary and primary care. The frailty assessment frameworks discussed would inform clinical commissioning and service redesign for older adults in England and across the UK.

Key measures

Frailty phenotype and/or frailty index; prevalence estimates; adverse health outcomes (hospitalisation, disability, mortality); clinical assessment tools

Outcomes reported

The paper examines the definition, prevalence, aetiology, and clinical consequences of frailty in older adults across healthcare and public health contexts. It appears to address assessment frameworks and interventions relevant to frailty management in clinical practice.

Theme
Nutrition & health
Subject
Dietary patterns & chronic disease
Study type
Narrative Review
Study design
Narrative review
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
Status
Published
Geography
International
System type
Human clinical
DOI
10.1016/s0140-6736(19)31786-6
Catalogue ID
SNmojg02dr-0djxwr

Topic tags

Pulse AI · ask about this record

Dig deeper with Pulse AI.

Pulse AI has read the whole catalogue. Ask about this record, its theme, or how the findings apply to UK farming and policy — every answer cites the underlying studies.