Perceptions of Frailty in Long-Term Care

Authors

  • Kayla Atchison University of Calgary
  • Pauline Wu University of Calgary
  • Ann M. Toohey University of Calgary
  • Daniel Gaetano University of Calgary
  • Jacqueline McMillan University of Calgary
  • Jenna Naylor University of Calgary
  • Sharon Kaasalainen McMaster University
  • Michelle N. Grinman University of Calgary
  • Vivian Ewa University of Calgary
  • Jessica Simon University of Calgary
  • James Silvius University of Calgary
  • Aynharan Sinnarajah University of Calgary
  • Beth Gorchynski AgeCare
  • David B. Hogan University of Calgary
  • Jayna Holroyd-Leduc University of Calgary
  • Zahra Goodarzi University of Calgary

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5770/cgj.28.817

Keywords:

frailty, palliative care, long-term care

Abstract

Background

An early palliative approach to care may best suit the care needs of older persons with frailty living in long-term care (LTC). The study objective was to evaluate the barriers and facilitators to care for frailty in the LTC setting.

Methods

Semi-structured interviews were completed with physicians, nurse practitioners, registered nurses, allied health-care providers, care partners, and residents with care experience in LTC. Framework analysis methods that leveraged behaviour change theories were used to analyze the interview data and produce practice-oriented findings.

Results

Twenty-eight interviews were completed. Seven themes were identified: resident characteristics related to frailty; frailty detection and diagnosis; frailty treatment and care planning; frailty and prognosis conversations; palliative and end-of-life care; communication amongst LTC collaborators; and the LTC environment. All codes were labelled as barriers or facilita-tors and assigned to a primary domain within the Theoretical Domains Framework.

Conclusions

The lack of clinical recognition of frailty in the LTC setting was a key barrier to clinical pathway implementation. There is a need for frailty to be linked to prognosis and care decisions, for frailty to be directly addressed through individualized treatments, and for an early palliative approach to care to be accessible to residents. Identifying barriers to care for frailty is a critical step toward clinical care pathway implementation which may improve care and outcomes for residents of LTC.

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Published

2025-06-04

How to Cite

1.
Atchison K, Wu P, Toohey AM, Gaetano D, McMillan J, Naylor J, Kaasalainen S, Grinman MN, Ewa V, Simon J, Silvius J, Sinnarajah A, Gorchynski B, Hogan DB, Holroyd-Leduc J, Goodarzi Z. Perceptions of Frailty in Long-Term Care. Can Geriatr J [Internet]. 2025 Jun. 4 [cited 2026 Apr. 25];28(2):136-44. Available from: https://cgjonline.ca/index.php/cgj/article/view/817

Issue

Section

Original Research