Frailty and length of stay in older adults with blunt injury in a national multicentre prospective cohort study.

dc.contributor.author

Tan, Timothy Xin Zhong

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Nadkarni, Nivedita V

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Chua, Wei Chong

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Loo, Lynette Ma

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Iau, Philip Tsau Choong

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Ang, Arron Seng Hock

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Goo, Jerry Tiong Thye

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Chan, Kim Chai

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Malhotra, Rahul

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Ong, Marcus Eng Hock

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Matchar, David Bruce

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Seow, Dennis Chuen Chai

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Nguyen, Hai V

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Ng, Yee Sien

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Chan, Angelique

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Wong, Ting-Hway

dc.date.accessioned

2021-06-02T01:06:03Z

dc.date.available

2021-06-02T01:06:03Z

dc.date.issued

2021-01

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2021-06-02T01:06:02Z

dc.description.abstract

Background

Patients suffering moderate or severe injury after low falls have higher readmission and long-term mortality rates compared to patients injured by high-velocity mechanisms such as motor vehicle accidents. We hypothesize that this is due to higher pre-injury frailty in low-fall patients, and present baseline patient and frailty demographics of a prospective cohort of moderate and severely injured older patients. Our second hypothesis was that frailty was associated with longer length of stay (LOS) at index admission.

Methods

This is a prospective, nation-wide, multi-center cohort study of Singaporean residents aged ≥55 years admitted for ≥48 hours after blunt injury with an injury severity score or new injury severity score ≥10, or an Organ Injury Scale ≥3, in public hospitals from 2016-2018. Demographics, mechanism of injury and frailty were recorded and analysed by Chi-square, or Kruskal-Wallis as appropriate.

Results

218 participants met criteria and survived the index admission. Low fall patients had the highest proportion of frailty (44, 27.3%), followed by higher level fallers (3, 21.4%) and motor vehicle accidents (1, 2.3%) (p < .01). Injury severity, extreme age, and surgery were independently associated with longer LOS. Frail patients were paradoxically noted to have shorter LOS (p < .05).

Conclusion

Patients sustaining moderate or severe injury after low falls are more likely to be frail compared to patients injured after higher-velocity mechanisms. However, this did not translate into longer adjusted LOS in hospital at index admission.
dc.identifier

PONE-D-21-01150

dc.identifier.issn

1932-6203

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1932-6203

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23316

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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PloS one

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10.1371/journal.pone.0250803

dc.title

Frailty and length of stay in older adults with blunt injury in a national multicentre prospective cohort study.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Matchar, David Bruce|0000-0003-3020-2108

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e0250803

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4

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School of Medicine

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Duke Clinical Research Institute

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Duke Global Health Institute

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Pathology

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Medicine, General Internal Medicine

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Duke

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Institutes and Centers

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University Institutes and Centers

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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Clinical Science Departments

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Medicine

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Published

pubs.volume

16

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