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Frailty prevalence in 42 European countries by age and gender: development of the SHARE Frailty Atlas for Europe.

Authors :
Pitter, János G.
Zemplényi, Antal
Babarczy, Balázs
Németh, Bertalan
Kaló, Zoltán
Vokó, Zoltán
Source :
GeroScience; Apr2024, Vol. 46 Issue 2, p1807-1824, 18p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Comparative frailty prevalence data across European countries is sparse due to heterogeneous measurement methods. The Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement (SHARE) initiative conducted interviews with probability sampling of non-institutionalized elderly people in several European countries. Previous frailty analyses of SHARE datasets were limited to initial SHARE countries and did not provide age- and gender-stratified frailty prevalence. Our aim was to provide age- and gender-stratified frailty prevalence estimates in all European countries, with predictions where necessary. From 29 SHARE participating countries, 311,915 individual surveys were analyzed. Frailty prevalence was estimated by country and gender in 5-year age bands using the SHARE Frailty Instrument and a frailty index. Association of frailty prevalence with age, gender, and GDP per capita (country-specific economic indicator for predictions) was investigated in multivariate mixed logistic regression models with or without multiple imputation. Female gender and increasing age were significantly associated with higher frailty prevalence. Higher GDP per capita, with or without purchasing power parity adjustment, was significantly associated with lower frailty prevalence in the 65–79 age groups in all analyses. Observed and predicted data on frailty rates by country are provided in the interactive SHARE Frailty Atlas for Europe. Our study provides age- and gender-stratified frailty prevalence estimates for all European countries, revealing remarkable between-country heterogeneity. Higher frailty prevalence is strongly associated with lower GDP per capita, underlining the importance of investigating transferability of evidence across countries at different developmental levels and calling for improved policies to reduce inequity in risk of developing frailty across European countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25092715
Volume :
46
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
GeroScience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175139526
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11357-023-00975-3