The History of Frailty in Gerontology
Frailty in gerontology has a surprisingly recent history as a formal concept. For most of the twentieth century, clinicians recognized “frail” older patients, but lacked a precise language or tools to describe what they were seeing. Early observations without a framework In everyday practice, many older people were described as “weak,” “frail,” or “run down,” but these were intuitive labels rather than defined clinical states. A chart could list dozens of diagnoses and largely “normal” lab values, yet the global impression remained: this patient “takes a hit” much worse than others of similar age and disease burden. There were almost no instruments to formalize this difference in reserve or vulnerability. Twentieth‑century biomedicine focused on acute, organ‑specific disease: one disease, one organ, one lesion. Within that frame, an older adult with multiple chronic conditions and slow recovery was coded simply as an “elderly patient,” not as someone with a distinct syndrom...