Fried Frailty Phenotype
The Fried frailty phenotype operationalizes frailty as a distinct biological syndrome of physical decline rather than as disease or disability. Introduced by Linda Fried and the Cardiovascular Health Study Collaborative Research Group in 2001, it defines frailty through five measurable criteria — unintentional weight loss, self-reported exhaustion, low physical activity, slow gait speed, and weak grip strength — and classifies older adults as robust, pre-frail, or frail by counting how many criteria are present. The phenotype gave gerontology a reproducible, predictive measure of vulnerability that forecasts falls, disability, hospitalization, and mortality, and it remains one of the two dominant operationalizations of frailty alongside the deficit-accumulation index.
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Sources
- Fried, L. P., Tangen, C. M., Walston, J., Newman, A. B., Hirsch, C., Gottdiener, J., ... & McBurnie, M. A. (2001). Frailty in older adults: evidence for a phenotype. The Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences, 56(3), M146-M157. DOI: 10.1093/gerona/56.3.M146 ↗
- Xue, Q. L. (2011). The frailty syndrome: definition and natural history. Clinics in Geriatric Medicine, 27(1), 1-15. DOI: 10.1016/j.cger.2010.08.009 ↗
How to cite this page
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Fried Physical Frailty Phenotype (Cardiovascular Health Study Criteria). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/social-gerontology/fried-frailty-phenotype
Which method?
Set this method beside its closest kin and read them side by side — the library lays the books on the table; the choice is yours.
- Comprehensive Geriatric AssessmentSocial Gerontology↔ compare
- Deficit-Accumulation Frailty IndexSocial Gerontology↔ compare
- Gait Speed AssessmentSocial Gerontology↔ compare
- Grip Strength AssessmentSocial Gerontology↔ compare