Studenski Stephanie, Perera Subashan, Wallace Dennis, Chandler Julie M, Duncan Pamela W, Rooney Earl, Fox Michael, Guralnik Jack M
Center on Aging, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2003 Mar;51(3):314-22. doi: 10.1046/j.1532-5415.2003.51104.x.
To assess the ability of gait speed alone and a three-item lower extremity performance battery to predict 12-month rates of hospitalization, decline in health, and decline in function in primary care settings serving older adults.
Prospective cohort study.
Primary care programs of a Medicare health maintenance organization (HMO) and Veterans Affairs (VA) system.
Four hundred eighty-seven persons aged 65 and older.
Lower extremity performance Established Population for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly (EPESE) battery including gait speed, chair stands, and tandem balance tests; demographics; health care use; health status; functional status; probability of repeated admission scale (Pra); and primary physician's hospitalization risk estimate.
Veterans had poorer health and higher use than HMO members. Gait speed alone and the EPESE battery predicted hospitalization; 41% (21/51) of slow walkers (gait speed <0.6 m/s) were hospitalized at least once, compared with 26% (70/266) of intermediate walkers (0.6-1.0 m/s) and 11% (15/136) of fast walkers (>1.0 m/s) (P <.0001). The relationship was stronger in the HMO than in the VA. Both performance measures remained independent predictors after accounting for Pra. The EPESE battery was superior to gait speed when both Pra and primary physician's risk estimate were included. Both performance measures predicted decline in function and health status in both health systems. Performance measures, alone or in combination with self-report measures, were more able to predict outcomes than self-report alone.
Gait speed and a physical performance battery are brief, quantitative estimates of future risk for hospitalization and decline in health and function in clinical populations of older adults. Physical performance measures might serve as easily accessible "vital signs" to screen older adults in clinical settings.
评估单纯步速以及三项下肢功能测试组合预测老年初级保健机构中12个月住院率、健康状况下降和功能下降的能力。
前瞻性队列研究。
医疗保险健康维护组织(HMO)和退伍军人事务部(VA)系统的初级保健项目。
487名65岁及以上的老年人。
下肢功能,采用老年流行病学研究既定人群(EPESE)测试组合,包括步速、从椅子上站起测试和串联平衡测试;人口统计学特征;医疗保健使用情况;健康状况;功能状态;再次入院概率量表(Pra);以及初级医生对住院风险的估计。
退伍军人的健康状况比HMO成员差,医疗保健使用率更高。单纯步速和EPESE测试组合可预测住院情况;慢步行者(步速<0.6米/秒)中41%(21/51)至少住院一次,中度步行者(0.6 - 1.0米/秒)为26%(70/266),快步行者(>1.0米/秒)为11%(15/136)(P <.0001)。这种关系在HMO中比在VA中更强。在考虑Pra后,这两项功能测试指标仍然是独立的预测因素。当同时纳入Pra和初级医生的风险估计时,EPESE测试组合比步速更具优势。这两项功能测试指标在两个医疗系统中均能预测功能和健康状况的下降。功能测试指标单独或与自我报告指标相结合,比单纯自我报告更能预测结果。
步速和身体功能测试组合是对老年临床人群未来住院风险以及健康和功能下降情况的简短定量评估。身体功能测试指标可作为临床环境中筛查老年人的易于获取的“生命体征”。