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The Canadian Fragility Scale is used worldwide I believe. Not like specific staging (ie stage IV cancer) but for a more holistic patient view.
Eg compare two 80 yr olds: both fair memory & processing skills. Jack is sturdy, ambulant, driving, good appetite, bathing alone. Jill is a stroke survivor, unsteady mobility, has lost muscle mass, so now part-time wheelchair user, poor appetite & low fluid intake, becoming prone to frequent chest & bladder infections.
*Frailty* I would try to use this word as a practical tool when making care plans. Also to consider swapping from having many specialists to one Geriatrician.
https://www.dal.ca/sites/gmr/our-tools/clinical-frailty-scale.html
"Given the complex nature of this geriatric syndrome, any single agent or approach targeted to one single organ system may not achieve optimal results."
"where we measure frailty as a complex variable based on five indicators: weakness, slowness, weight loss, exhaustion and low physical activity"
The data I read went on to say Women can live like this 18 yrs and a man about 14 using age 70 as the time its diagnoised. It said that exercise and protein help to keep it at bay and change in lifestyle change can make a difference and can reverse it.
I don't think a neurologist can help here. Doesn't seem to be a neurological problem. From what I read, it effects the organs so is a system problem. I read where a Geriatrician is needed. This does not seem to have anything to do with Dementia. The word Psychological could cover a lot of things.
I just don't find any doctors here (usa) that note this, all the info i have found is Canada or overseas.