It is not all black and white: The effect of increasing severity of frailty on outcomes of geriatric trauma patients

Autor: Alizai, Qaidar, Colosimo, Christina, Hosseinpour, Hamidreza, Stewart, Collin, Bhogadi, Sai Krishna, Nelson, Adam, Spencer, Audrey L., Ditillo, Michael, Magnotti, Louis J., Joseph, Bellal, Amos, Joseph D., Teichman, Amanda, Whitmill, Melissa L., Burruss, Sigrid K., Dunn, Julie A., Najafi, Kaveh, Godat, Laura N., Enniss, Toby M., Shoultz, Thomas H., Egodage, Tanya, Bongiovanni, Tasce, Hazelton, Joshua P., Colling, Kristin P., Costantini, Todd W., Stein, Deborah M., Schroeppel, Thomas J., Nahmias, Jeffry, El-Qawaqzeh, Khaled, Choron, Rachel L., Comish, Paul B., Leneweaver, Kyle, Palmer, Brandi, Truitt, Michael S., Farrell, Mike, Laufenberg, Lacee J., Lasso-Tay, Erica, Stillman, Zachery, Hass, Daniel T., Grossman, Heather M., Gordon, Darnell, Krause, Cassandra, Thomas, Jonathan
Zdroj: Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery; March 2024, Vol. 96 Issue: 3 p434-442, 9p
Abstrakt: The spectrum of physiologic deficits, once a patient is identified as frail, is unknown. Increase in TSFI score correlates with rising odds of in-hospital mortality, complications, readmissions, fall recurrence, and 3-month post-discharge mortality.
Databáze: Supplemental Index