How can identifying and grading frailty support older people in acute and community settings?
How can identifying and grading frailty support older people in acute and community settings?
Why you should read this article:
To recognise that identifying frailty is important to support older people living with complex needs
To be aware that a frailty screening and assessment tool should be used that is most appropriate for the clinician’s service
To understand that collaborative working can improve care and reduce hospital admissions for older people living with frailty
Identifying frailty is essential to support older people living with complex health and social care needs. This article discusses how a Florence Nightingale Foundation travel scholar used her scholarship to explore best practice in identifying frailty in acute and community settings in Scotland with the aim of developing services for people living with frailty locally and regionally in England.
As the move to integrated care services develops in England, valuable insights from Scotland will assist in the proactive design of bespoke services around the needs of individuals in the community and, when acutely unwell, in the hospital setting.
Frailty, Older People
27-32
Lewis, Lucy Anne
b7bac6f9-0e97-41da-93fe-9af4f0a27f9e
8 August 2020
Lewis, Lucy Anne
b7bac6f9-0e97-41da-93fe-9af4f0a27f9e
Lewis, Lucy Anne
(2020)
How can identifying and grading frailty support older people in acute and community settings?
Nursing Older People, 32 (6), .
(doi:10.7748/nop.2020.e1271).
Abstract
Why you should read this article:
To recognise that identifying frailty is important to support older people living with complex needs
To be aware that a frailty screening and assessment tool should be used that is most appropriate for the clinician’s service
To understand that collaborative working can improve care and reduce hospital admissions for older people living with frailty
Identifying frailty is essential to support older people living with complex health and social care needs. This article discusses how a Florence Nightingale Foundation travel scholar used her scholarship to explore best practice in identifying frailty in acute and community settings in Scotland with the aim of developing services for people living with frailty locally and regionally in England.
As the move to integrated care services develops in England, valuable insights from Scotland will assist in the proactive design of bespoke services around the needs of individuals in the community and, when acutely unwell, in the hospital setting.
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Published date: 8 August 2020
Keywords:
Frailty, Older People
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Local EPrints ID: 509984
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509984
ISSN: 1472-0795
PURE UUID: fa5be153-a28f-40b3-a66f-14b9ffb3ab41
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Date deposited: 12 Mar 2026 17:47
Last modified: 13 Mar 2026 02:54
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Author:
Lucy Anne Lewis
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