背景(考古学)
医学
老年学
弹性(材料科学)
心理弹性
队列
早衰
心理学
生物
热力学
古生物学
生理学
物理
内科学
心理治疗师
作者
Chenkai Wu,T.-Z. Lin,Jason L. Sanders
出处
期刊:The Journal of frailty & aging
[SERDI]
日期:2022-01-01
被引量:6
摘要
Physical resilience is an emerging concept within the context of aging and geriatric medicine, and we previously developed and validated one such indicator based on the mismatch between persons’ frailty level and multimorbidity burden. We sought to develop a simplified version for classifying physical resilience. We also examined the agreement between the simplified version and the original approach and evaluated its predictive validity. Participants were 2,457 older adults from the Health, Aging, and Body Composition Study. We constructed a simplified version for quantifying physical resilience based on the multimorbidity burden and level of frailty (score: 0–10). Participants were grouped by the number of diseases and classified into three groups—adapters, expected agers, and premature frailers—based on the mean and SD of frailty score (less than, within, or above one standard deviation of the mean). The Cohen’s kappa between the novel resilience classification and the original approach was 0.70, and the percentage of absolute agreement was 85.4%. We observed a steep increase in years of healthy and able life from premature frailers to adapters in the simplified resilience classifications. We developed a simplified version for quantifying physical resilience in a cohort of initially well-functioning older Black and White adults. The agreement between the simplified version and the original approach is high. Adapters had a longer healthy lifespan than expected agers and premature frailers. This user-friendly indicator could help assess patients’ physical resilience in clinical settings.
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