Introduction
Recent interest in frailty has rapidly expanded; it now forms a dominant health paradigm in geriatric medicine and is being positioned as a public health priority by policy makers who cite pressures from the ageing population (Cesari et al., Reference Cesari, Gambassi, Van Kan and Vellas2014). Several studies based on large data-sets have demonstrated the ability of frailty measurement tools to predict adverse outcomes such as unplanned hospitalisation and death. This has made the concept popular with biomedical researchers, health economists and policy makers; the routine identification of frailty from general practice (GP) electronic health records is now part of National Health Service (NHS) England's GP contract. However, there is no universally accepted definition of what frailty actually is and concern about how the concept is being applied is growing. This paper adopts the Foucauldian concept of biopower as a lens, through which the contemporary emergence, and drive towards the routine nosology, of frailty is analysed. Rabinow and Rose's (Reference Rabinow and Rose2003) interpretation of biopower as a theoretical framework allows several critical observations to be made; the paper will begin with a brief overview of this theoretical approach, followed by the main argument, presented in three sections. First, examination of quantitative biomedical studies and NHS England policy documents suggests that, despite conceptual ambiguity, frailty is presented as a truth discourse. As a result, frailty can be used as a tool to render life processes knowable; measuring frailty allows state bodies to enumerate the risk of older people accessing increasingly scarce health resources and thus threatening the existing shape of health-care systems. In addition, frailty offers geriatric medicine legitimacy by positioning geriatricians as frailty experts. Second, by drawing on existing social science literature, it will be suggested that this enumeration, and the resultant categorical delineation between frail and robust individuals, is a dividing practice that objectifies older people. Third, despite the association of frailty with socio-economic deprivation, current frailty interventions shift the weight of responsibility away from modifiable structural causes of health inequalities towards frail individuals, attempting to encourage older people to self-manage through lifestyle modifications. In the context of the contemporary political climate of austerity, attempting to subjectivate already-marginalised populations is problematic. By considering how the contemporary emergence and application of frailty can be understood as a biopolitical practice, and critically analysing it as such, this paper suggests that frailty as a concept primarily benefits state-led health and economic institutions rather than older individuals.
The contemporary emergence of frailty
The UK's population is ageing (Office for National Statistics, 2017). Despite the benefits of increasing longevity, older people are often presented as a cost, threat or challenge to the economic sustainability of state health services by governments, medical experts and the media (Laurence, Reference Laurence2002; Press Association, 2005; Silcock and Sinclair, Reference Silcock and Sinclair2012; Campbell, Reference Campbell2015; Thompson, Reference Tian, Thompson and Buck2015; Vines et al., Reference Vines, Pritchard, Wright, Olivier and Brittain2015). Popular narratives specifically problematise the frail elderly, often with reference to crises within the NHS and social care (Donnelly, Reference Donnelly2013; Pickles, Reference Pickles2015; Thompson, Reference Thompson2015; Siddique, Reference Siddique2016). The current political climate of economic austerity has resulted in cuts to public services and a focus on rationalising health resources (Iacobucci, Reference Iacobucci2014; Green et al., Reference Green, Dorling, Minton and Pickett2017). As a result, there is a political drive to identify those at risk of utilising costly services; the recent controversial move to offer general practitioners financial incentives to not refer patients to hospital embodies these dynamics (Campbell, Reference Campbell2018).
Geriatric medicine has a long-established tradition of delineating between normal and abnormal ageing in individuals; contemporarily, research and practice has moved towards establishing these divisions at the population level (Katz, Reference Katz1996; Rowe and Kahn, Reference Rowe and Kahn1997; Depp and Jeste, Reference Depp and Jeste2006). Frailty embodies this trend by attempting to conceptualise variable population ageing (Mitnitski et al., Reference Mitnitski, Mogilner and Rockwood2001). Frailty's popularity has increased exponentially in recent years, a trajectory reflected by academic literature; in 1998 fewer than ten peer-reviewed articles with the terms ‘frailty and elderly’ were identified, contrasted with 40 in 1998 and 388 in 2012 (Pickard, Reference Pickard2014). However, a rigorous, universally accepted definition of what frailty actually is remains elusive – a problem frequently acknowledged by biomedical academics (Fried et al., Reference Fried, Tangen, Walston, Newman, Hirsch, Gottdiener, Seeman, Tracy, Kop, Burke and McBurnie2001; Ensrud, Reference Ensrud2008; Gilleard and Higgs, Reference Gilleard and Higgs2011b). A consensus definition was developed by conference delegates from major international, European and North American societies in 2013, however, it remains vague:
A medical syndrome with multiple causes and contributors that is characterized by diminished strength, endurance, and reduced physiologic function that increases an individual's vulnerability for developing increased dependency and/or death. (Morley et al., Reference Morley, Vellas, van Kan, Anker, Bauer, Bernabei, Cesari, Chumlea, Doehner, Evans, Fried, Guralnik, Katz, Malmstrom, McCarter, Gutierrez Robledo, Rockwood, von Haehling, Vandewoude and Walston2013: 392)
Some scholars suggest that rather than pursuing a unifying definition of frailty, researchers should be clear what they mean when they employ the term (Rockwood, Reference Rockwood2005; Martin and Brighton, Reference Martin and Brighton2008). This infers that frailty is a travelling concept, which can be interpreted, and therefore utilised, variably. This ambiguity represents a fundamental weakness; Bortz (Reference Bortz2010: 255) understands frailty as ‘an emergent construct’ that ‘like the weather … resists facile measurement and definition’. Gilleard and Higgs (Reference Gilleard and Higgs2011b: 476) problematise frailty as ‘a state of becoming rather than an identity that has been achieved’.
The numerous and ever-expanding approaches to the measurement of frailty described by biomedical researchers are broadly dividable into two dominant conceptual approaches, both of which emerged in the early 2000s: the frailty phenotype (FP) and the deficit accumulation model. The FP understands frailty as a distinct syndrome observable in some older individuals, based on a set of five characteristics: self-reported unintentional weight loss, self-reported exhaustion, weakness (measured by a grip-strength dynamometer), slow walking speed and self-reported low physical activity (Fried et al., Reference Fried, Tangen, Walston, Newman, Hirsch, Gottdiener, Seeman, Tracy, Kop, Burke and McBurnie2001). The deficit accumulation model suggests frailty represents the accumulation of physical, psychological and social impairments, which places individuals at risk of adverse outcomes (Mitnitski et al., Reference Mitnitski, Mogilner and Rockwood2001). This theory is operationalised though the Frailty Index (FI), where deficits are counted and a score allocated based on the proportion of deficits present out of the number of deficits counted. Deficits can include symptoms, signs, functional impairments and laboratory abnormalities; simply accumulating deficits appears to be a robust characteristic that is not sensitive to the choice of particular items (Rockwood et al., Reference Rockwood, Andrew and Mitnitski2007).
Both the FP and the FI were developed before the consensus definition. As a result, both conceptual approaches to frailty are validated through prediction of often-costly adverse outcomes such as falls, institutionalisation and mortality. Both the FP and the FI have been shown to be independently predictive of death and dependency (Fried et al., Reference Fried, Tangen, Walston, Newman, Hirsch, Gottdiener, Seeman, Tracy, Kop, Burke and McBurnie2001; Mitnitski et al., Reference Mitnitski, Mogilner and Rockwood2001; Boyd et al., Reference Boyd, Xue, Simpson, Guralnik and Fried2005; Fugate Woods et al., Reference Fugate Woods, LaCroix, Gray, Aragaki, Cochrane, Brunner, Masaki, Murray and Newman2005; Bandeen-Roche et al., Reference Bandeen-Roche, Xue, Ferrucci, Walston, Guralnik, Chaves, Zeger and Fried2006; Cawthon et al., Reference Cawthon, Marshall, Michael, Dam, Ensrud, Barrett-Connor and Orwoll2007). However, when compared in a large-scale study (N = 2,305), the FP and FI showed only moderate correlation for content validity (R = 0.65) (Rockwood et al., Reference Rockwood, Andrew and Mitnitski2007). This could be taken to infer that the two approaches measure different facets of frailty, however, as the construct in question is so poorly defined, it may suggest the FP and FI are measuring distinct phenomena, thus it appears the conceptual ambiguities surrounding frailty translate methodologically (Martin and Brighton, Reference Martin and Brighton2008; Cesari et al., Reference Cesari, Gambassi, Van Kan and Vellas2014). Indeed, criterion validity is examined through measurements of mortality and institutionalisation; these adverse outcomes occurred more commonly among frail people, irrespective of the measurement tool used. The content validity measurements used in these studies are edifying. By appraising operationalisations of frailty against death and dependency, frailty is positioned as an adverse-outcome risk-identification tool, rather than a discrete syndrome or well-defined clinical entity.
The analytical framework
Biopower emerged from Foucault's work in the 1970s, where it was used to describe the tactics used to govern lives within contemporary states (Foucault and Senellart, Reference Foucault and Senellart2008). Biopolitics describes the particular strategies within the field of biopower that make lives knowable and governable (Rabinow and Rose, Reference Rabinow and Rose2003). As such, biopower and biopolitics are a set of diverse techniques that create ways of knowing and controlling populations and their constituent biological lives (Foucault, Reference Foucault1998). Liberal states focus on welfare promotion for both population and economy; biopolitics is a facet of contemporary governmental practices, employing categorisation strategies to organise lives for the purposes of distinction and division (Walters, Reference Walters2004). An idea central to Foucault's conceptualisation of the term was that modern liberal states used biopower paradoxically to foster life, whilst concurrently disallowing life to the point of death. Foucault contrasts this with more traditional sovereignty, which he conceptualised as able to ‘take life or let live’: ‘The old power of death that symbolized sovereign power … was now carefully supplanted by the administration of bodies and the calculated management of life’ (Foucault, Reference Foucault1998: 139–140).
In an attempt to provide conceptual clarification, and in critique of others who have used the concept too broadly, Rabinow and Rose (Reference Rabinow and Rose2003) suggest that biopower should be used as an analytical tool and applied to processes which involve three key elements: knowledge of vital life processes, power relations that take humans as living beings as object, and modes of subjectification through which individuals work on themselves. Grenier (Reference Grenier2007), Twigg (Reference Twigg2004) and Pickard (Reference Pickard2014) employed Foucauldian ideas when describing the dynamics around frailty's materialisation and nosology, whilst McCloskey and Van Den Hoonaard (Reference McCloskey and Van Den Hoonaard2007) refer to biopolitics in their critical consideration of the social dynamics between nursing home residents and the emergency room. However, a rigorous Foulcauldian analysis of the contemporary emergence and utilisation of frailty has not been undertaken. In arguing that the concept of frailty can be understood as a form of biopower, and analysing it as such, this paper will provide a critical and novel perspective on the frailty's conception and the politics of its nosology. Applying Rabinow and Rose's (Reference Rabinow and Rose2003) structured consideration of biopower allows underlying governmental rationale to be critiqued systematically, and problematises some of the assumptions underpinning the utilisation of frailty.
Frailty as a truth discourse
Rabinow and Rose suggest that biopolitical practices offer:
One or more truth discourses about the ‘vital’ character of living human beings, and an array of authorities considered competent to speak that truth. These truth discourses … may hybridize biological and demographic or even sociological styles of thought … merged in the new language of susceptibility. (Rabinow and Rose, Reference Rabinow and Rose2003: 3–4)
By narrating older people as a cost, a threat or a burden, increasing age is commonly constructed in relation to risk. For Higgs and Gilleard (Reference Higgs and Gilleard2014: 15), ‘frail people are seen – at least by others – as being permanently at risk’. This risk is multi-level, ranging from individual to societal, and well as multi-dimensional, spanning ideas of health, economics and, more recently, politics, where older voters are constructed as a challenge to progressive ideology (Walker, Reference Walker1990; Kharicha et al., Reference Kharicha, Iliffe, Harari, Swift, Gillmann and Stuck2007; Davidson, Reference Davidson2012; Curtice, Reference Curtice2015; Prince et al., Reference Prince, Wu, Guo, Gutierrez Robledo, O'Donnell, Sullivan and Yusuf2015; Dorling, Reference Dorling2016; Aboderin, Reference Aboderin2017; Ayalon, Reference Ayalon2017; Seo, Reference Seo2017). Considering older people's risk of falls illustrates how discourses of risk and susceptibility pervade multiple domains and levels. If, for example, an individual is felt by a health-care professional (HCP) to be at risk of falling, they pose a risk to themselves, through the potentiality for consequent illness, injury and death. In turn, family and care-givers see the older individual as at risk, assumptions which have psychological impacts for the older person and their carers, and may also have implications for resources needed for care (Faes et al., Reference Faes, Reelick, Joosten-Weyn Banningh, Gier, Esselink and Olde Rikkert2010; Bauer and Sousa-Poza, Reference Bauer and Sousa-Poza2015). Moreover, falls are understood to pose a risk to society by way of economic threat, through the utilisation of costly health and social care (Heinrich et al., Reference Heinrich, Rapp, Rissmann, Becker and König2010; Tian et al., Reference Tian, Thompson and Buck2014).
In short, older people are considered simultaneously a risk and at risk; emergent biomedical conceptualisations of frailty capitalise on this dominant ideology. By scoring vital characteristics of older people and generating numerical values that are suggested to relate, albeit at the population level, to risk of decline or death, frailty proffers to quantify risk of decline scientifically. This centralises ideas of risk and augments the discourses around older people's vulnerabilities representing both a burden and a threat. The ability of frailty measurement tools to predict often-costly adverse outcomes results in a subordination of the quest for conceptual clarification. Thus, the ambiguity around what frailty as a biomedical condition actually is becomes obfuscated, and the idea of frailty and its measurement emerges from the aforementioned pieces of quantitative research as a knowable truth discourse.
Despite the British Geriatrics Society stipulating that the routine identification of frailty should not be attempted, the quantification of populations’ risk of using finite health-care resources was considered to be to a valuable opportunity (British Geriatrics Society, 2014b; Turner and Clegg, Reference Turner and Clegg2014). In 2014, an electronic Frailty Index (eFI), based on electronic read codes in patients’ GP medical records, was developed. It adopts the FI as its theoretical approach and automatically populates frailty scores from electronic health data in order to categorise individuals routinely as frail, pre-frail or robust (Clegg et al., Reference Clegg, Bates, Young, Ryan, Nichols, Teale, Mohammed, Parry and Marshall2016). Like other measurement tools, the validity of the eFI rests on its prediction of hospitalisation, nursing home admission and all-cause mortality. It is suggested that general practitioners use it in combination with clinical judgement to facilitate decision-making, such as whether to refer for invasive treatment, which may be life-saving but high-risk, and to prompt the initiation of advance care planning for those at risk of death and decline (Afilalo et al., Reference Afilalo, Mottillo, Eisenberg, Alexander, Noiseux, Perrault, Morin, Langlois, Ohayon, Monette, Boivin, Shahian and Bergman2012; Clegg et al., Reference Clegg, Young, Iliffe, Rikkert and Rockwood2013; Revenig et al., Reference Revenig, Canter, Taylor, Tai, Sweeney, Sarmiento, Kooby, Maithel, Master and Ogan2013; Kim et al., Reference Kim, Han, Jung, Kim, Hwang, Kang and Kim2014; Turner and Clegg, Reference Turner and Clegg2014).
This interested policy makers. After imbedding the eFI into electronic GP records in the UK, the routine identification of frailty in all patients over the age of 65 has been incorporated into the most recent NHS England GP contract (NHS England, 2017). The rationale for this is said to centre around improving the quality of care of older people, however, the problems associated with incentivising the application of diagnostic labels on to the older person are multiple. Clinical judgements can become subordinate to arbitrary reductionist biomedical categories, which homogenise diverse groups of individuals with varied health and social needs (Checkland et al., Reference Checkland, Harrison, McDonald, Grant, Campbell and Guthrie2008; Pickard, Reference Pickard2013). As Pickard (Reference Pickard2013: 978) highlights, a strategy to diagnose routinely older individuals with chronic kidney disease represents ‘an extension of surveillance medicine’ which transforms a person into a patient. More broadly, the result of incentivising the routine identification of frailty is the institutionalisation of the concept, which promotes its advancement towards becoming a truth discourse (Checkland et al., Reference Checkland, Harrison, McDonald, Grant, Campbell and Guthrie2008; Pickard, Reference Pickard2013).
In order to comply with the contract, after the eFI categorises an individual as frail, clinicians must perform a clinical assessment to confirm or refute the diagnostic label. Next they should ‘take action’ (NHS England, 2017). Such action includes consenting the frail patient for the activation of an Enriched Summary Care Record (ESCR), which allows extensive personal medical information to be shared to a centralised NHS database. Although ESCR are promoted as a way of facilitating continuity of care, the centralisation of personal medical details can be problematic, with the sharing of sensitive information, inaccurate record keeping and data security cited as concerns (Powell et al., Reference Powell, Fitton and Fitton2006; Perera et al., Reference Perera, Holbrook, Thabane, Foster and Willison2011; Spring, Reference Spring2018; Syal, Reference Syal2018). Here medical information is accessible, not just to staff at the GP surgery, but to anyone with authorised access, including private companies providing NHS services, researchers and health policy makers (NHS Digital, 2018). As such, the eFI not only offers an enumerated way of quantifying older people's complex needs, it initiates a process that augments experts’ knowledge of older individuals’ lives.
Pickard (Reference Pickard2014) convincingly argues that the contemporary popularity of frailty is inherently linked to the professional ambitions of geriatric medicine. The specialty status of the discipline has historically been questioned, with both scepticism over its significance from outside, and crises of identity from within geriatrics (Reuben et al., Reference Reuben, Zwanziger, Bradley and Beck1994; Lanoie Blanchette and Flynn, Reference Lanoie Blanchette and Flynn2001; Elon, Reference Elon2006; Denaro and Mudge, Reference Denaro and Mudge2008; Tinetti, Reference Tinetti2016). Frailty legitimises the specialty by centralising geriatricians’ role in the management of a prevalent complex problem; consequently, the reconfiguration of the profession of geriatric medicine around frailty has been welcomed (Pickard, Reference Pickard2014). In his Marjory Warren lecture at the Annual British Geriatrics Society meeting 2007, Powel stated: ‘Marjory Warren may have started with a view to serving all elderly people, but we now focus our attention on the frail, older adult’ (Powel, Reference Powel2007: 607, cited in Pickard, Reference Pickard2014: 557).
Considered against the backdrop of popular narratives which position older people as a threat and a burden to the current shape of health care, frailty capitalises on ideas of ‘risk, merged in the new language of susceptibility’ and renders individuals’ lives knowable (Rabinow and Rose, Reference Rabinow and Rose2003: 3). The routine identification of frailty represents the utilisation of nosology as a powerful tool, used to facilitate the collection of individuals’ detailed biopsychosocial data, which is then accessible for use by multiple governmental bodies. Moreover, in a poignant biopolitical cycle of reaffirmation, expert and governmental endorsement of the predictive power of frailty measurements obfuscate conceptual ambiguities, and position expert geriatric medicine as the professional body competent to speak that particular truth (Rabinow and Rose, Reference Rabinow and Rose2003).
As a result, frailty emerges as a truth discourse; it is an increasingly pervasive diagnostic label, which is knowable and detectable within clinical practice, and has speciality endorsement. However, in Foucauldian terms, frailty is not a deficit; rather it is an addition, an unwanted ‘supplement contributed by disciplinary knowledge and power’ (Allen, Reference Allen and Tremain2015: 94). Foucault holds that knowledge shapes, regulates and legitimises norms, leaving the social world in a knowable and therefore governable format (Simons, Reference Simons1995). The creation of designated social groups assists governmental systems by processes and practices that meet and maintain areas of need; this both practically and theoretically maintains the entire regulatory enterprise (Tremain, Reference Tremain2015).
Frailty as a mode of objectification
Rabinow and Rose's second specification for processes of biopower is that of objectification, whereby there are:
Strategies for intervention upon collective existence in the name of life and health … addressed to populations that may … be specified in terms of emergent biosocial collectivities, sometimes specified in terms of categories of race, ethnicity, gender or religion, as in the emerging forms of genetic or biological citizenship. (Rabinow and Rose, Reference Rabinow and Rose2003: 4)
Foucault considered subjects to be objectivised through dividing practices: ‘Examples are the mad and the sane, the sick and the healthy, the criminals and the “good boys”’ (Bratich et al., Reference Bratich, Packer and McCarthy2003: 154). The process of diagnosis enables clinicians to categorise individuals based on a set of pre-existing characteristics decided by the medical profession; as such, it is a way of creating social order and is associated with the exertion of a significant material force (Blaxter, Reference Blaxter1978; Bowker and Star, Reference Bowker and Star2000; Jutel, Reference Jutel2009). By giving order to illness and disease, diagnosis is fundamental to the system of modern medicine, allowing physicians to plan therapeutic interventions, estimate prognosis and attribute aetiology.
Diagnostic categories also function as administrative and economic tools by allowing organisations to strategise resources for population health provision. On a more portentous vein, nosology is responsible for creating partitions for corporeal processes and in doing so ‘valorises some whilst disregarding others’; the occupation of particular diagnostic categories can make individuals eligible for particular interventions and services, and can exclude them from others (Jutel, Reference Jutel2009: 278). The routine identification of frailty can ‘inform the appropriate selection of elderly people for invasive procedures or drug treatments’ (Clegg et al., Reference Clegg, Young, Iliffe, Rikkert and Rockwood2013: 752). Conversely, being deemed too frail can be used as a justification for ‘investigative and therapeutic nihilism’ (Campbell and Buchner, Reference Campbell and Buchner1997: 315; Sánchez-Garrido et al., Reference Sánchez-Garrido, Cesari, Sgaravatti, Zengarini, Moreira, Borda, Zúñiga-Gil and Pérez-Zepeda2016).
All biomedical diagnoses involve processes of delineation and ‘power relations that take humans as living beings as their object’ (Rabinow and Rose, Reference Rabinow and Rose2003: 34). However, the practice of routinely categorising older people as either frail or robust is particularly problematic. Unlike other medical conditions with established pathological processes and therapeutic interventions, such as diabetes, frailty is a theoretical state of potential morbidity and mortality (Degnen, Reference Degnen2007). Whilst the biomedical objectives of developing such a risk stratification tool may be noble, even pertinent, the result is that frailty is conceptualised as a metaphorical ‘event horizon, beyond which lies the social death of the subject’ (Sweeting and Gilhooly, Reference Sweeting and Gilhooly2008; Higgs and Gilleard, Reference Higgs and Gilleard2014: 10). In other words, unlike agedness, illness and disability, frailty is neither a condition, an identity nor a social position; instead it is the potential of a threatened future (Gilleard and Higgs, Reference Gilleard and Higgs2011a, Reference Gilleard and Higgs2011b). This builds on earlier discussions about how frailty can be understood as a proxy for, and concretisation of, risk; by considering the routine nosology of frailty as a form of objectification, the degree to which the frail are constructed as ‘others’ destined for failure is highlighted.
Whilst many other diagnostic categories are associated with established management plans, the routine screening for frailty has been met with resistance from HCPs, who have cited concerns about lack of treatment and insufficiently integrated specialist health and social care services for those diagnosed as frail (Shaw et al., Reference Shaw, Gwyther, Holland, Bujnowska-Fedak, Kurpas, Cano, Marcucci, Riva and D'avanzo2018). Even seemingly pragmatic basic interventions, such as medication reviews and falls assessments, have not been shown to alter the trajectory of frailty (Turner and Clegg, Reference Turner and Clegg2014). The aforementioned conceptual ambiguity of frailty also causes confusion and rejection of the concept, with HCPs questioning the term's usefulness, instead preferring more pragmatic approaches that highlight specific care requirements (Manthorpe and Iliffe, Reference Manthorpe and Iliffe2015; Gwyther et al., Reference Gwyther, Shaw, Jaime Dauden, D'Avanzo, Kurpas, Bujnowska-Fedak, Kujawa, Marcucci, Cano and Holland2018). Frailty is seen by some HCPs as being related to the end of life, and is used in medical notes to justify the refusal of surgery, cardio-pulmonary resuscitation or admission to intensive care (Revenig et al., Reference Revenig, Canter, Taylor, Tai, Sweeney, Sarmiento, Kooby, Maithel, Master and Ogan2013; BritainThinks et al., 2015; Romero-Ortuno et al., Reference Romero-Ortuno, Wallis, Biram and Keevil2016; Haden, Reference Haden2018).
The lay understanding of frailty carries significant stigma and ‘links with the negative social imaginary of a feared old age’ (Gilleard and Higgs, Reference Gilleard and Higgs2011b: 478). Linguistic etymology of the term may be responsible for this in part; the universal lay perception of frailty is one of a negative state of existence, resulting in a social stigma that extends beyond its biomedical diagnostic intentions. The Oxford English Dictionary definition of frailty includes:
wanting in power … unable to resist temptation; habitually falling into transgression … perishableness … a frail feature or spot, a flaw … A fault arising from infirmity; a ‘weakness’. (Simpson and Weiner, Reference Simpson and Weiner1989)
Grenier (Reference Grenier2007) argues this connects frailty with powerlessness, impairment and an implication of blame, which inherently causes social devaluation. Older people have reported recognising first-hand experiences of living with frailty and believe they can recognise frailty in others; despite this they avoid the term as a self-identity, due to the perception of frailty as a negative and irreversible label that is associated with end of life (Nicholson et al., Reference Nicholson, Meyer, Flatley, Holman and Lowton2012; BritainThinks et al., 2015). Moreover, frailty is seen to represent a loss of control, autonomy and independence (Warmoth et al., Reference Warmoth, Lang, Phoenix, Abraham, Andrew, Hubbard and Tarrant2016).
It has been suggested that a diagnosis of frailty attempts to make impairments visible, without acknowledging the lived experiences of physical and personal vulnerability (Grenier, Reference Grenier2007; Grenier and Hanley, Reference Grenier and Hanley2007). As previously discussed, frailty offers experts ways of making biological lives knowable, but the consequences of this on the objectified individual can be denigrative, even leading to psychological distress (Fillit and Butler, Reference Fillit and Butler2009; Puts et al., Reference Puts, Shekary, Widdershoven, Heldens and Deeg2009). Illness-beliefs are associated with a number of adverse outcomes in those with chronic conditions, including self-management and quality of life (Petrie et al., Reference Petrie, Jago and Devcich2007; Richardson et al., Reference Richardson, Karunananthan and Bergman2011). It has been suggested that being diagnosed as frail leads to disengagement with social and physical activities which, in turn, leads to further marginalisation (Warmoth et al., Reference Warmoth, Lang, Phoenix, Abraham, Andrew, Hubbard and Tarrant2016). This disempowering objectification carries the imaginary threat of failure and death, and represents ‘profound abjection and the collapse of agency and personal identity’; a superfluous and unwelcome addition to everyday ageism (Fillit and Butler, Reference Fillit and Butler2009; Higgs and Gilleard, Reference Higgs and Gilleard2014: 10).
In summary, despite the well-endorsed declaration that ‘frailty is the most problematic expression of population ageing’, being routinely labelled frail offers little tangible benefit to the individual (Clegg et al., Reference Clegg, Young, Iliffe, Rikkert and Rockwood2013: 752). The linguistic connotation of the terminology has resulted in rejection from older people whilst its contested biomedical utility and unclear management pathways have created resistance amongst some HCP tasked with carrying out processes of categorisation. Frailty is perceived, and consequently lived, as a ‘stigmatised cycle of decline’, and is a form of objectification most often imposed upon individuals who are largely unable to resist it (Kaufman, Reference Kaufman1994; Grenier, Reference Grenier2006; Warmoth et al., Reference Warmoth, Lang, Phoenix, Abraham, Andrew, Hubbard and Tarrant2016: 1490).
Frailty as a mode of subjectification
The third tenet of Rabinow and Rose's conceptualisation of biopower is that of subjectification. In contrast to objectification, where individuals are worked on by others, subjectification encourages individuals ‘to work on themselves, under certain forms of authority, in relation truth discourses … in the name of individual or collective life or health’ (Rabinow and Rose, Reference Rabinow and Rose2003: 4). Subjectification attempts can be seen throughout biomedical academic literature and policy documents on frailty; researchers using the language, and focusing on the strategy, of self-management, defined as the ‘ability to obtain those resources necessary for the production of well-being’ (Frieswijk et al., Reference Frieswijk, Steverink, Buunk and Slaets2006: 219; Fairhall et al., Reference Fairhall, Langron, Sherrington, Lord, Kurrle, Lockwood, Monaghan, Aggar, Gill and Cameron2011; Cramm et al., Reference Cramm, Twisk and Nieboer2014; Maddocks et al., Reference Maddocks, Kon, Canavan, Jones, Nolan, Labey, Polkey and Man2016). The British Geriatrics Society guidance Fit for Frailty suggests:
In terms of modifiable influences, the most studied is physical activity, particularly resistance exercise, which is beneficial both in terms of preventing and treating the physical performance component of frailty. The evidence for diet is less extensive but a suboptimal protein/total calorie intake and vitamin D insufficiency have both been implicated. There is emerging evidence that frailty increases in the presence of obesity particularly in the context of other unhealthy behaviours such as inactivity, a poor diet and smoking. (British Geriatrics Society, 2014a)
Experts’ suggested encouragements to older people to self-manage in order to reverse or alter frailty's trajectory are problematic. Thrice-weekly, long-term exercise programmes do not readily translate into existing clinical service structures and may not be acceptable to individuals. Moreover, suggestions are based on methodologically inadequate studies, making questionable claims that frailty is reversible (Liu and Latham, Reference Liu and Latham2009; Theou et al., Reference Theou, Stathokostas, Roland, Jakobi, Patterson, Vandervoort and Jones2011). This adds to clinicians’ scepticism about the usefulness of the routine identification of frailty; unlike many other medical conditions, the causes, prognosis and benefits of therapeutic interventions for frailty for the individual patient are unclear (Rockwood, Reference Rockwood2016; Gwyther et al., Reference Gwyther, Shaw, Jaime Dauden, D'Avanzo, Kurpas, Bujnowska-Fedak, Kujawa, Marcucci, Cano and Holland2018; Shaw et al., Reference Shaw, Gwyther, Holland, Bujnowska-Fedak, Kurpas, Cano, Marcucci, Riva and D'avanzo2018).
Importantly though, the association of frailty with socio-economic deprivation raises ethical concerns about these subjectification attempts. The association between increasing inequalities in both wealth and health in the UK since the introduction of social policies in the 1970s and 1980s have been observed by a number of scholars, who hypothesise that the former is key in determining the latter (Shaw et al., Reference Shaw, Dorling, Gordon and Smith1999, Reference Shaw, Davey Smith and Dorling2005; Wilkinson and Pickett, Reference Wilkinson and Pickett2009; Bennett et al., Reference Bennett, Li, Foreman, Best, Kontis, Pearson, Hambly and Ezzati2015). Data from the Office for National Statistics supports this inference; men living in the most affluent areas can expect to live disability-free for 15 years longer than their poorest counterparts. The gap in health inequalities continues to increase; years spent with a disability increased for those living in the most deprived areas between 2002–2005 and 2006–2009, though they remained the same for the wealthiest (Office for National Statistics, 2013).
The association between wealth and health is also observable in frailty; poorer groups become frailer at a younger age and socio-economic factors appear to impact the trajectory of frailty, with faster rates of deficit accumulation in poorer groups (Yang and Lee, Reference Yang and Lee2010; Marshall et al., Reference Marshall, Nazroo, Tampubolon and Vanhoutte2015). Other cohort studies have highlighted similar associations; socio-economic deprivation has been linked to poor balance and chair rise times in the UK, and premature gerontological syndromes and increased mortality amongst the poorest has been observed in the United States of America (Kuh et al., Reference Kuh, Bassey, Butterworth, Hardy and Wadsworth2005; Crimmins et al., Reference Crimmins, Kim and Seeman2009; Brown et al., Reference Brown, Kiely, Bharel and Mitchell2012). Recent research demonstrated that frail individuals in lower socio-economic strata have poorer subjective wellbeing than their equally frail but more wealthy counterparts, raising questions about how poverty augments the negative psychological impacts of frailty (Hubbard et al., Reference Hubbard, Goodwin, Llewellyn, Warmoth and Lang2014; Warmoth et al., Reference Warmoth, Tarrant, Abraham and Lang2018). Moreover, aforementioned self-management strategies are less readily utilised in poorer socio-economic groups; this is unsurprising, given self-management's intractable relationship to the availability of resources (Cramm et al., Reference Cramm, Twisk and Nieboer2014).
On-going cuts to ‘public spending on a range of social determinants of health under the rhetoric of austerity’ means health inequalities are likely to continue to rise, with disadvantaged social groups impacted most (Bennett et al., Reference Bennett, Li, Foreman, Best, Kontis, Pearson, Hambly and Ezzati2015: 169; Lupton et al., Reference Lupton, Burchardt, Fitzgerald, Hills, Mcknight, Obolenskaya, Stewart, Thomson, Tunstall and Vizard2015). These structural health inequalities are modifiable at a governmental level; however, despite socio-economic factors being shown to be associated with frailty, biomedical literature rarely reflects this, even correcting for it with statistical analysis, implying an assumption of non-modifiability (Wilkinson and Pickett, Reference Wilkinson and Pickett2009). Instead, health policy and biomedical discourses of frailty-prevention strategies largely centre on associations between frailty and individual health behaviours. The association of frailty with socio-economic deprivation raises ethical concerns about these subjectification attempts, especially in the context of populations already marginalised by exclusionary austerity policies.
Conclusion
The recent dominance of frailty in academic literature and health-care policies demonstrates its popularity amongst many geriatricians and policy makers, however, there are concerns about the concept from other HCPs, scholars and older people themselves. Given the well-described marginalising and disempowering effects of a diagnosis of frailty, it is important to consider critically the contemporary drive to delineate the frail from the robust routinely. This paper has used Rabinow and Rose's model of biopower as a tool to analyse the contemporary conceptualisation and application of frailty as a biopolitical practice; in doing so a number of critical observations have been made about the socio-political dynamics associated with the exponential rise in frailty nosology.
Firstly, despite biomedical experts’ acknowledgement of frailty's conceptual ambiguities, the ability of frailty measurements to predict the risk of costly adverse outcomes has made the concept popular. As such, frailty is presented as a truth discourse and the routine identification of frailty is now incentivised, written into the NHS GP contract in 2017. Frailty scores, which embody ideas of risk by digitally enumerating older people's often-complex needs, offer health policy makers a convenient way of knowing a population's constituent biological lives and add legitimacy to the profession of geriatric medicine by positioning geriatricians as frailty experts. Moreover, the routine mass categorisation of particular older people as frail deproblematises the process of the construction of frailty as a social group (Burghardt, Reference Burghardt2013).
Secondly, the routine nosology of frailty can be understood as a dividing practice, which results in the objectification of older people. Stigma associated with the lay interpretation of the term means that individuals tend to resist the label, whilst some HCPs have concerns about its value. Scholars have described how frailty represents a feared social imaginary of death and decline, and how this can negatively impact those categorised as frail. Consequently, the diagnosis of frailty can be said to benefit those making the diagnosis over those being diagnosed, with the latter becoming objectified and disempowered.
Lastly, like disability and mortality, frailty has been shown to be associated with ever-increasing inequalities in wealth in the UK; these inequalities are the result of governmental ideology, including contemporary austerity policies. Despite these structural inequalities, experts’ suggested management of frailty shifts the focus of responsibility away from the state and on to the older person, attempting to encourage individuals to work on themselves through self-management and lifestyle modification. This fails to account for the association between resource availability, lifestyle opportunities and socio-economic factors, thus neglecting the impact of long-term poverty on health. This results in practically and ethically questionable subjectification attempts, aimed at frail older individuals.
Despite these issues, a dominant drive to identify the frailest in a community persists, often presented through discourses which propose benefits for health systems at large (Morley et al., Reference Morley, Vellas, van Kan, Anker, Bauer, Bernabei, Cesari, Chumlea, Doehner, Evans, Fried, Guralnik, Katz, Malmstrom, McCarter, Gutierrez Robledo, Rockwood, von Haehling, Vandewoude and Walston2013; Turner and Clegg, Reference Turner and Clegg2014). In these narratives, the meaning of frailty is subverted; instead of a frail population being inherently vulnerable and in need of protection, it is considered a threat to health-care systems due to the mismatch between frail individuals’ multifaceted health issues and the more binary approach to medical treatment offered by health service providers (Rockwood, Reference Rockwood2016: 328). Whilst a frail individual is liable to fail, and so requires protection, the process of being offered such protection makes them both an economic risk and a burden to the current configuration of health care.
Whilst acknowledging that in practice many stakeholders position themselves, and indeed move, between the two polemic ideological positions on frailty described in this theoretical analysis, the frame of biopower has facilitated a critical examination of the emergence of frailty. The current political climate of austerity and cuts to public services bring the urgency of this critique to the fore. Contemporarily, the strategic focus of health care centres around rationalising increasingly scarce resources, rather than restructuring services that struggle to address the complex health needs of an ageing population; and rather than describing a pathological condition for the purpose of therapeutic intervention and improving individuals’ wellbeing, frailty proffers to identify people most at risk of utilising costly emergency health services. This analysis highlights that although frailty is presented as a biological, scientific truth in quantitative academic literature, its rapid emergence, expert endorsement and routine diagnosis should be carefully considered against the contemporary socio-political environment in the UK. Doing so demonstrates that this biologically ambiguous and etymologically problematic concept has come to occupy a powerful biopolitical position and thus raises concerns about the routine nosology of frailty.
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank Prof. Neil Pendleton, Dr David Bourne, Prof. James Nazroo, Prof. Bertrand Taithe and Dr Rubina Jasani for their thoughtful feedback, which assisted the development of this paper.
Conflict of interest
The author certifies that they have no affiliations with, or involvement in, any organisation or entity with any financial interest (such as honoraria; educational grants; participation in speakers’ bureaus; membership, employment, consultancies, stock ownership or other equity interest; and expert testimony or patent-licensing arrangements), or non-financial interest (such as personal or professional relationships, affiliations, knowledge or beliefs) in the subject matter or materials discussed in this paper.
Financial support
This paper was developed as part of a doctoral research project which was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (grant number 9801149).
Ethical standards
Ethical approval was not required.