Torrens University Australia
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The relationship between frailty and social vulnerability: a systematic review

journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-12, 23:26 authored by Elsa DentElsa Dent, Peter Hanlon, Heather Wightman, Marina Politis, Stella Kirkpatrick, Caitlin Jones, Melissa K. Andrew, Davide L. Vetrano, Emiel O. Hoogendijk
<p dir="ltr">Both frailty (reduced physiological reserve) and social vulnerability (scarcity of adequate social connections, support, or interaction) become more common as people age and are associated with adverse consequences. Analyses of the relationships between these constructs can be limited by the wide range of measures used to assess them. In this systematic review, we synthesised 130 observational studies assessing the association between frailty and social vulnerability, the bidirectional longitudinal relationships between constructs, and their joint associations with adverse health outcomes. Frailty, across assessment type, was associated with increased loneliness and social isolation, perceived inadequacy of social support, and reduced social participation. Each of these social vulnerability components was also associated with more rapid progression of frailty and lower odds of improvement compared with the absence of that social vulnerability component (eg, more rapid frailty progression in people with social isolation vs those who were not socially isolated). Combinations of frailty and social vulnerability were associated with increased mortality, decline in physical function, and cognitive impairment. Clinical and public health measures targeting frailty or social vulnerability should, therefore, account for both frailty and social vulnerability.</p>

Funding

Understanding prevalence and impact of frailty in chronic illness and implications for clinical management

Medical Research Council

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History

Year of publication

2024

Publisher doi

10.1016/S2666-7568(23)00263-5

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