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Frailism: A scoping review exploring discrimination against people living with frailty

Braude, Philip; Lewis, Emma Grace; Broach Kc, Steve; Carlton, Edward; Rudd, Sarah; Palmer, Jean; Walker, Richard; Carter, Ben; Benger, Jonathan

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Authors

Philip Braude

Emma Grace Lewis

Steve Broach Kc

Edward Carlton

Sarah Rudd

Jean Palmer

Richard Walker

Ben Carter

Jonathan Benger



Abstract

People living with frailty can experience discrimination, but unlike the characteristics of age and disability, frailty is not protected by law. Frailty is a clinical syndrome associated with ageing in which health deficits increase a person's vulnerability to illness, disability, and death. This scoping review, conducted by a team of methodologists, clinicians, lawyers, and patients, aimed to investigate the extent of discrimination against people living with frailty described in health-care literature. We searched five health-care databases from inception up to June, 2022, and grey literature, to identify 144 texts. The texts were classified by the types of discrimination (direct discrimination, indirect discrimination, harassment, and victimisation) and inductively developed into contextual themes. The median age of the participants was 77 years (IQR 69·9-82·0), and 65·4% were women. The most common types of discrimination were direct (in 90 [63%]), indirect (in 66 [46%]), and harassment (in one [1%]) of the 144 texts, with no instances of victimisation reported. Nine themes of discriminatory actions were developed. Discrimination against people living with frailty overlapped with discrimination based on established protected characteristics, including age, disability, race, and sex. Evidence indicated that frailty discrimination replaces, mediates, masks, and potentiates age discrimination. Discrimination against people with frailty seemed to be both an independent event and one that interacts with established protected characteristics. Future research should focus on preventing frailty-based discrimination and establishing whether frailty should be considered a new protected characteristic by law. [Abstract copyright: Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.]

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 2, 2024
Online Publication Date Dec 24, 2024
Publication Date Jan 31, 2025
Deposit Date Feb 14, 2025
Publicly Available Date Feb 26, 2025
Journal The lancet. Healthy longevity
Electronic ISSN 2666-7568
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 6
Issue 1
Article Number 100651
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lanhl.2024.100651
Keywords Frailty, discrimination, elderly, disability, ageism
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/13669778

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