Frailty is a clinical state characterized by a decrease of an individual's homeostatic reserves and is responsible for enhanced vulnerability to endogenous and/or exogenous stressors. Such a condition of extreme vulnerability exposes individuals to an increased risk of negative health-related outcomes. Multiple operational definitions of frailty are available in the literature, but none can be indicated as a gold standard. Frailty should be considered a condition of major interest for public health and become the lever for reshaping the obsolete health care systems currently unable to adequately address the clinical needs of aging populations
Gotaro Kojima,1 Ann EM Liljas,2 Steve Iliffe1 1Department of Primary Care and Population Health, Uni...
Frailty, a progressive physiologic decline in multiple body systems, is defined as a state of increa...
Frailty is a geriatric syndrome characterized by reduced homeostatic reserves, exposing the organism...
Frailty is the most problematic expression of population ageing. It is a state of vulnerability to p...
Older people differ in their level of multimorbidity, functional dependence and need for assistance....
Frailty is an important geriatric syndrome with a high prevalence in the community population. It ca...
Frailty is an important geriatric syndrome with a high prevalence in the community population. It ca...
Frailty is an important geriatric syndrome with a high prevalence in the community population. It ca...
Older, more vulnerable individuals are increasingly often described in the literature as being frail...
The absolute and relative increases in the number of older persons are evident worldwide, from the m...
In the last decade frailty has been increasingly regarded as an independent geriatric syndrome chara...
The absolute and relative increases in the number of older persons are evident worldwide, from the m...
Contains fulltext : 79796.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Older people d...
Q2184-185Frailty is a clinical state that increases an individual's vulnerability. It is an outcome ...
Frailty has long been considered synonymous with disability and comorbidity, to be highly prevalent ...
Gotaro Kojima,1 Ann EM Liljas,2 Steve Iliffe1 1Department of Primary Care and Population Health, Uni...
Frailty, a progressive physiologic decline in multiple body systems, is defined as a state of increa...
Frailty is a geriatric syndrome characterized by reduced homeostatic reserves, exposing the organism...
Frailty is the most problematic expression of population ageing. It is a state of vulnerability to p...
Older people differ in their level of multimorbidity, functional dependence and need for assistance....
Frailty is an important geriatric syndrome with a high prevalence in the community population. It ca...
Frailty is an important geriatric syndrome with a high prevalence in the community population. It ca...
Frailty is an important geriatric syndrome with a high prevalence in the community population. It ca...
Older, more vulnerable individuals are increasingly often described in the literature as being frail...
The absolute and relative increases in the number of older persons are evident worldwide, from the m...
In the last decade frailty has been increasingly regarded as an independent geriatric syndrome chara...
The absolute and relative increases in the number of older persons are evident worldwide, from the m...
Contains fulltext : 79796.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Older people d...
Q2184-185Frailty is a clinical state that increases an individual's vulnerability. It is an outcome ...
Frailty has long been considered synonymous with disability and comorbidity, to be highly prevalent ...
Gotaro Kojima,1 Ann EM Liljas,2 Steve Iliffe1 1Department of Primary Care and Population Health, Uni...
Frailty, a progressive physiologic decline in multiple body systems, is defined as a state of increa...
Frailty is a geriatric syndrome characterized by reduced homeostatic reserves, exposing the organism...