Frailty Flashcards
What are the different levels of frailty (1-10 using the Clinical Frailty Scale)?
- Very fit
- Well (no active disease symptoms)
- Managing Well (not regularly active)
- Vulnerable (not dependent on others, symptoms limit activities)
- Mildly Frail (more evident slowing, high order LADLs)
- Moderately Frail (help for outside activities + house keeping, bathing + minimal assistance with dressing)
- Severely Frail (complete dependency for carer)
- Very Severely Frail (approaching end of life)
- Terminally Ill (Life expectancy <6 months)
What is the CURB-65 scoring system?
Used to asses Pneumonia Severity
High score = low prognosis
Used on >65yrs
C = new mental confusion U = urea >7 mmol/L R = respiratory rate >30 per min B = blood pressure (systolic BP <90 / diastolic BP <60)
SCENARIO…
50 yr old man presents with right lower chest wall pain - pleuritic, breathlessness + haemoptysis. Has fever, bronchial breathing and dullness to percussion at the right base.
CXR = cloudy lungs seen
What is the diagnosis?
Pneumonia
What is the treatment?
CURB-65
Antibiotics
Stop smoking
Follow up CXR
How would we expect a recovery of pneumonia to be following treatment?
1 week: fever should have resolved
4 weeks: chest pain and sputum production should have been substantially reduced
6 weeks: cough and breathlessness should have substantially reduced
3 months: most symptoms should have resolved but fatigue may still be present
6 months: most people will feel back to normal
What are the the manifestations of frailty?
- Delirium
- Falls + Fractures
- Immobility + pressure sores
- Incontinence + dipstick +ve UTI
- Iatrogenesis (injury caused by medication)
What are characteristics that can be used to describe a ‘good death’?
- Avoiding medicalisation and thus prolongation of the dying process
- Avoid the situation of ‘medical captivity’ of being a frightened patient
- An agreed care plan
- Adequate symptom control
What are the principles of a ‘good death’?
- To be warned when death is coming and learn what can be expected
- To be able to retain control of what happens
- To be afforded dignity and privacy
- To have control over pain relief and other symptom control
- To have choice and control over where death occurs
- To have access to information and expertise of whatever kind is necessary
- To have access to any spiritual or emotional support required
- To have access to hospice care
- To have control over who is present and who shares the end
- To be able to issue advance directives which ensure wishes are respected
- To have time to say goodbye, and control over other aspects of timing
- To be able to leave when is is time to go and not have life prolonged pointlessly