4.7 Article

The electronic frailty index as an indicator of community healthcare service utilisation in the older population

Journal

AGE AND AGEING
Volume 48, Issue 2, Pages 273-277

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ageing/afy181

Keywords

frailty; electronic frailty index; service use; electronic health record; community care; older people

Funding

  1. National Institute for Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care East of England (NIHR CLAHRC EoE)

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older people with frailty are particularly high users of healthcare services, however a lack of standardised recording of frailty in different healthcare electronic datasets has limited investigations into healthcare service usage and demand of the older frail population. to investigate the community service demand of frail patients using the electronic frailty index (eFI) as a measure of frailty. a retrospective cohort study using anonymised linked healthcare patient data from primary care, community services and acute hospitals in Norfolk. patients aged 65 and over who had an eFI assessment score established in their primary care electronic patient record in Norwich based General Practices. we include data from 22,859 patients with an eFI score. Frailty severity increased with age and was associated with increased acute hospital admission within a 6-month window. Patients with a frail eFI score were also more likely to have a community service referral within a 6-month window of frailty assessment, with a RR of 1.84 (1.761.93) for mild frailty, 1.96 (1.832.09) for moderate frailty and 2.95 (2.763.14) for severe frailty scores. We also found that frail patients had more community referrals per patient then those classified as fit and required more care plans per community referral. eFI score was an indicator of community service use, with increasing severity of frailty being associated with higher community healthcare requirements. The eFI may help planning of community services for the frail population.

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