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. 2018 Sep 30;22(3):137–144. doi: 10.4235/agmr.2018.22.3.137

Table 2.

Prevalence of frailty according to different frailty scales

Frailty scale Total (n=1,318) Men (n=647) Women (n=671)



Robust Prefrail Frail Robust Prefrail Frail Robust Prefrail Frail
CHS 516 (39.2) 655 (49.7) 147 (11.2) 311 (48.1) 287 (44.4) 49 (7.6) 205 (30.6) 368 (54.8) 98 (14.6)

K-FRAIL 555 (42.1) 599 (45.4) 164 (12.4) 348 (53.8) 257 (39.7) 42 (6.5) 207 (30.8) 342 (51.0) 122 (18.2)

KFI 833 (63.2) 365 (27.7) 120 (9.1) 451 (69.7) 148 (22.9) 48 (7.4) 382 (56.9) 217 (32.3) 72 (10.7)

FI 820 (62.2) 422 (32.0) 76 (5.8) 451 (69.7) 164 (25.3) 32 (4.9) 369 (55.0) 258 (38.5) 44 (6.6)

KLoSHA 833 (63.2) 435 (33.0) 50 (3.8) 394 (60.9) 232 (35.9) 21 (3.2) 439 (65.4) 203 (30.3) 29 (4.3)

SOF 862 (65.4) 423 (32.1) 33 (2.5) 465 (71.9) 165 (25.5) 17 (2.6) 397 (59.2) 258 (38.5) 16 (2.4)

Values are presented as number (%).

CHS, Cardiovascular Health Study; K-FRAIL, Korean version of the Fatigue, Resistance, Ambulation, Illnesses, and Loss of weight scale; KFI, Korean Frailty Index; FI, Frailty Instrument; KLoSHA, Korean Longitudinal Study on Health and Aging; SOF, Study of Osteoporotic Fracture.