The combined effects of physical frailty and cognitive impairment on emergency department- versus direct-admission hospitalizations

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Abstract

Background: We aimed to study whether physical frailty and cognitive impairment (CI) increase the risk of recurrent hospitalizations in older adults, independent of comorbidity, and disability. Methods: Two thousand five hundred forty-nine community-dwelling participants from the National Health and Aging Trends Study (NHATS) with 3 + years of continuous Medicare coverage from linked claims data were included. We used the marginal means/rates recurrent events model to investigate the association of baseline CI (mild CI or dementia) and physical frailty, separately and synergistically, with the number of all-source vs. Emergency Department (ED)-admission vs. direct admission hospitalizations over 2 years. Results: 17.8% of participants had at least one ED-admission hospitalization; 12.7% had at least one direct admission hospitalization. Frailty and CI, modeled separately, were both significantly associated with risk of recurrent all-source (Rate Ratio (RR) = 1.24 for frailty, 1.21 for CI; p

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Buta, B., Friedman, A. B., Chung, S. E., Sheehan, O. C., Blinka, M. D., Gearhart, S. L., & Xue, Q. L. (2022). The combined effects of physical frailty and cognitive impairment on emergency department- versus direct-admission hospitalizations. BMC Geriatrics, 22(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-022-03397-6

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