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The NHS Frailty Paradox Series: Part 5 | From Identification to System: Making Population Health Management Work
Population health management for frailty is not defined by identification alone, but by delivering the right intervention at the right stage of frailty progression.
Part 5 of the Frailty Paradox series explores frailty management across the spectrum, from prevention and early intervention through to Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA), continuity, and coordination for people living with moderate and severe frailty.
The NHS Frailty Paradox Series: Part 4 | When Everyone Is at Risk, Who Do You Prioritise?
Not everyone living with frailty can be seen. The question is who is reached in time.
In Part 4 of the Frailty Paradox series, we explore how signals of deterioration are used to prioritise risk and target coordinated care.
The NHS Frailty Paradox Series: Part 3 | Bridging the Gap: From Frailty Identification to a Self-Replenishing Frailty Register
Frailty identification in the NHS is often fragmented, inconsistent, and reactive.
In Part 3 of the Frailty Paradox series, we explore how continuous, clinician-led identification through a self-replenishing frailty register can make frailty visible across a population, forming the foundation for effective prioritisation and intervention.
The NHS Frailty Paradox Series: Part 2 | Frailty Identification in Integrated Neighbourhood Teams
The NHS cannot manage frailty if it cannot see it.
In Part 2 of the Frailty Paradox series, we explore why general practice is best placed to anchor a shared, system-wide view of frailty. We examine the strengths and limitations of current approaches, drawing on real-world experience and published evidence.
The findings suggest that current methods may identify fewer than half of patients living with frailty, and that no single tool meets all four key requirements for effective identification: accuracy, scalability, early detection, and usability in clinical practice.
The NHS Frailty Paradox Series: Part 1 | The Work Exists, The System Does Not.
The NHS is not failing to deliver frailty care. The workforce is already identifying risk, assessing need, and delivering support every day, but this activity is not organised as a coordinated neighbourhood response.
This is the Frailty Paradox: the work exists, but the system to bring it together does not.
This series explores how the NHS can move from fragmented activity to coordinated population health management for frailty through integrated neighbourhood teams.
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