학술논문
It is not all black and white: The effect of increasing severity of frailty on outcomes of geriatric trauma patients
Document Type
Article
Author
Alizai, Qaidar; Colosimo, Christina; Hosseinpour, Hamidreza; Stewart, Collin; Bhogadi, Sai Krishna; Nelson, Adam; Spencer, Audrey L.; Ditillo, Michael; Magnotti, Louis J.; Joseph, Bellal; Amos, Joseph D.; Teichman, Amanda; Whitmill, Melissa L.; Burruss, Sigrid K.; Dunn, Julie A.; Najafi, Kaveh; Godat, Laura N.; Enniss, Toby M.; Shoultz, Thomas H.; Egodage, Tanya; Bongiovanni, Tasce; Hazelton, Joshua P.; Colling, Kristin P.; Costantini, Todd W.; Stein, Deborah M.; Schroeppel, Thomas J.; Nahmias, Jeffry; El-Qawaqzeh, Khaled; Choron, Rachel L.; Comish, Paul B.; Leneweaver, Kyle; Palmer, Brandi; Truitt, Michael S.; Farrell, Mike; Laufenberg, Lacee J.; Lasso-Tay, Erica; Stillman, Zachery; Hass, Daniel T.; Grossman, Heather M.; Gordon, Darnell; Krause, Cassandra; Thomas, Jonathan
Source
Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery; March 2024, Vol. 96 Issue: 3 p434-442, 9p
Subject
Language
ISSN
21630755; 21630763
Abstract
The spectrum of physiologic deficits, once a patient is identified as frail, is unknown. Increase in TSFI score correlates with rising odds of in-hospital mortality, complications, readmissions, fall recurrence, and 3-month post-discharge mortality.