The role of physical frailty independent components on increased disabilities in institutionalized older women
Date
2019Author
Furtado, Guilherme
Letieri, Rubens
Caldo, Adriana
Patricio, Miguel
Loureiro, Marisa
Hogervorst, Eaf
Ferreira, Jose P.
Teixeira, Ana M.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The purpose of this study was to
identify the independent components of physical
frailty that most influence disability indicators in
institutionalized older women. A cross-sectional
study with 319 participants (81.96+/-7.89 years old)
was performed. Disability was assessed through
dynamic and static balance tests, activities of daily
life and falls risk screen. Fried physical frailty
protocol was used to access physical frailty. The frail
subgroup displayed the weakest results for all
disability indicators (p < 0.05). Regression analysis
showed that in the two models tested, low physical
activity levels and slowness were the physical frailty
independent components that better associated with
the disability indicators. More studies with larger
samples will help to better understand the
independent relationship of each physical frailty
component with disability outcomes and assist to
design a co-adjuvant treatment to reverse physical
frailty.