Newswise, June 29, 2017 — Physical
frailty is common among the elderly and is strongly associated with cognitive
impairment, dementia and adverse health outcomes such as disability,
hospitalisation, and mortality. A four-year study conducted by researchers from
the National University of Singapore (NUS) showed that a combination of
nutritional, physical and cognitive interventions can reverse physical frailty
in elderly people.
Associate Professor Ng Tze Pin, who
is from the Department of Psychological Medicine at the NUS Yong Loo Lin School
of Medicine, and the leader of the research team, said that earlier research
findings from the Singapore Longitudinal Ageing Studies (SLAS) by his team
showed that physically frail elderly persons compared to their robust
counterparts are eight times as likely to be cognitive impaired at the same
time, and if they are not cognitively impaired, they are more than five times
at risk of becoming cognitively impaired on follow up three years later.
“In addition, physically frail
elderly persons are two to 10 times as likely to become functionally disabled
on daily living activities, hospitalised and die earlier than their robust
counterparts. When physical frailty and cognitive impairment are present
together in the same individual, he or she is more than 20 times as likely to
become disabled, hospitalised or die earlier. With such compelling evidence, if
it is possible to reduce or even reverse physical frailty in the elderly, we
could greatly improve their quality of life,” Assoc Prof Ng explained.
Assoc Prof Ng and his team conducted
a four-year trial between 2010 and 2013, involving 250 community-living older
persons in Singapore who were 65 years old and above and who showed signs of
frailty.
“Our study shows that it is feasible
to identify pre-frail and frail older persons in the community and primary care
settings and provide them with lifestyle interventions to reverse frailty. We
found that better nutrition, physical training and mental exercises can reverse
frailty, enhance muscle strength and gait speed, reduce depressive symptoms and
improve cognitive functioning. As such, these interventions can go a long way
to reducing the high prevalence of physical disability, hospitalisation and
mortality in an ageing society like Singapore,” Assoc Prof Ng added.
Fighting frailty in
elderly people
Participants for the trial were
recruited from October 2009 to August 2012 from various senior activity centres
in Singapore. They were randomly allocated to receive lifestyle interventions
in one of five groups for a period of six months. Three groups of participants
were provided with either physical training, nutritional enhancement or
cognitive training, while the fourth group received a combination of all three
interventions. The last group was a control group which did not receive any
intervention. The trial was conducted in collaboration with Khoo Teck Puat
Hospital and St Luke’s Hospital.
Assessment of the participants’
frailty and other outcomes were made before the start of intervention. During
the six-month trial, the participants’ progress were measured after three
months and six months. A follow-up assessment was also conducted six months
after the trial (i.e. 12 months after the start of intervention).
The NUS researchers found that the
three types of intervention, as well as a combination of all three approaches,
were able to reduce frailty and depressive symptoms, and improve cognitive
functioning of the elderly.
Assoc Prof Ng noted, “The important
message from our studies is that frailty is not an inevitable part of ageing.
There is much that older people can do for themselves to avoid becoming frail
and disabled, so it is vital that they pay attention to good quality diet and
nutrition, engage in physical exercise, and participate in socially and
cognitively stimulating activities.”
Intervention programmes
to benefit the elderly
Following the encouraging findings
from the trial, the research team is working with the Geriatric Education and
Research Institute (GERI) and social service organisations to develop and implement
pilot frailty screening and multi-domain lifestyle intervention community
programmes. They hope that such programmes when successfully scaled up for mass
intervention can help improve the physical, psychological and cognitive
well-being of large numbers of senior citizens.
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