Preventing Frailty Through Healthy Environments: The Slovenian Systemic Pre-Frailty Project
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. Project “Systemic Approach to Frailty with a Focus on Pre-Frailty for Healthy and High-Quality Aging”
1.2. Research Question and Objectives
2. Methodology
2.1. Data Sources and Tools
2.2. Data Description
- Policy frameworks: Reviewed the ADVANTAGE Joint Action Slovenia Roadmap and the European Guide for Management of Frailty at Individual Level [25] to extract foundational guidelines and evidence-graded recommendations that served as the conceptual baseline for our project.
- Member-States Survey: In early 2018, a 24-question survey developed by ADVANTAGE JA was distributed to health planners, managers, and social-service representatives across EU Member States, yielding an 85% response rate. The survey captured national policies, strategies, and interventions for frailty prevention and management, and its results were categorized into five implementation levels. From these findings, ten priority activities for Slovenia were identified and compiled into a “Roadmap of Activities” [26], which we reviewed to inform and shape our project concept.
- Evidence Mapping/Preliminary literature review: A narrative review was conducted by searching academic databases with targeted keywords and snowballing techniques. In total, 92 full-text papers were screened, and 16 studies were included to prepare the project concept. Although no formal descriptive statistical analysis was performed at this stage, the key findings of each study were synthesized qualitatively. A comprehensive descriptive and quantitative analysis will be undertaken later as part of the project’s systematic review.
- Living Environment Assessment (OBO) Tool: The OBO tool (adapted from the JAHEE Place Standard Tool (https://www.ourplace.scot/tool (accessed on 10 May 2025)) for the Slovenian context) assesses both physical and social dimensions of the living environment through 14 indicators: public transport, traffic and parking, streets and public spaces, play and recreation areas, facilities and services, work and local economy, housing and community, social interaction, identity and belonging, perceived safety, care and maintenance, sense of influence and control, mobility, and access to natural spaces. Each indicator is supported by a few targeted questions, simplifying evaluation under each theme and laying the groundwork for a clear spider-web chart that highlights strengths and weaknesses of the assessed environment. Pilot testing will be carried out as part of the project.
- Field Data: (1) Municipal GIS layers (via https://gis.iobcina.si/ (accessed on 10 May 2025)): evaluated 5 basic urban design and planning indicators correlated with frailty risk (land-use mix; proximity to key services; green-space ratio; public transport infrastructure; and public spaces - descriptive assessment only; detailed GIS analysis to follow.) (2) Basic geographical characteristics: assessed 8 indicators: Slovenian statistical region; municipal area; population density; municipality type (City Municipality); Healthy City designation; disability-friendly municipality; age-friendly municipality; and general urban/rural classification. (3) Socio-demographic data (via https://www.stat.si/ (accessed on 20 May 2025)): analyzed 17 indicators, including total population; age-group shares; aging index; employment rate; migration; and access to recreational areas. (4) Pilot community selection: initially evaluated 9 municipalities using the above data; five were chosen for in-depth study (for the further investigation as part of the project). Informal discussions were held with some regional-unit representatives at their regular meetings.
3. Results
3.1. Preliminary Literature Review
3.2. Conceptual Framework
3.3. Healthy Communities Work Package with Assigned Project Tasks
4. Discussion
4.1. Key Findings
- The living environment has an important impact on the health of older adults and is a key factor in managing and preventing frailty.
- The Living Environment Assessment (OBO) tool provides a structured and validated framework for shaping both built and social environments to prevent and mitigate frailty.
- A community-based health approach effectively bridges the health and planning sectors by bringing together public health experts, urban planners and designers, and local decision-makers to evaluate the living environment and co-create interventions that enhance safety, accessibility, and social engagement for older adults.
4.2. Comparison with Existing Literature
4.3. Research Gaps and Theoretical Contribution
4.4. Implications
4.5. Strengths and Limitations
4.6. Future Research
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Data Source | N/Scope | Key Metrics |
---|---|---|
Policy frameworks | 2 documents | Qualitative extraction of high-level recommendations |
Member States survey | 22 Member states; 24 questions | Qualitative synthesis of national practices |
Narrative literature review | 91 full text papers screened, 16 studies included | Qualitative synthesis of key findings |
Living Environment Assessment (OBO) tool | 14 indicators | Prepared for frailty-risk adaptation |
Field data | 5 GIS-based indicators; 8 geographical indicators; 17 socio-demographic indicators | 9 pilot communities evaluated; 5 selected for in-depth study |
Category | No. of Studies (n = 16) | Percentage of All Reviewed Articles |
---|---|---|
Study type | ||
Review | 5 | 31.3% |
Systematic review or meta-analysis | 3 | 18.8% |
Longitudinal study | 5 | 31.3% |
Other original research (cross-sectional, multilevel analysis) | 3 | 18.8% |
Other | 1 | 6.3% |
Main observed determinants | ||
Walkability | 4 | 25.0% |
Street connectivity | 2 | 12.5% |
Accessibility | 5 | 31.3% |
Physical activity | 5 | 31.3% |
Access to green spaces | 2 | 12.5% |
Housing and neighborhood characteristics (e.g., barrier-free access) | 1 | 6.3% |
Land-use mix and access (e.g., recreational facilities, community meeting spaces) | 2 | 12.5% |
Residential density | 1 | 6.3% |
Neighborhood perception | 2 | 12.5% |
Esthetics | 2 | 12.5% |
Safety | 2 | 12.5% |
Social frailty (e.g., social isolation and loneliness) | 4 | 25.0% |
Social cohesion | 1 | 6.3% |
Social participation | 2 | 12.5% |
Interactions | 1 | 6.3% |
Social network (e.g., community support networks) | 1 | 6.3% |
Physical Environmental Factors | Social Environmental Factors |
---|---|
Walkability (connectivity, accessibility, sidewalk quality) | Social cohesion (programs and events that foster social cohesion, such as community gatherings, workshops, and group activities) |
Access to green spaces | Opportunities for interactions |
Housing and neighborhood characteristics (barrier-free access via ramps, curb cuts, level entrances) | Social participation |
Land-use diversity and access (recreational facilities, community meeting spaces) | Availability of community meeting places |
Neighborhood perception | Social network (community support networks such as volunteer groups) |
Esthetics and safety | Social isolation and loneliness |
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Jutraž, A.; Pirnat, N.; Gabrovec, B. Preventing Frailty Through Healthy Environments: The Slovenian Systemic Pre-Frailty Project. Buildings 2025, 15, 3182. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15173182
Jutraž A, Pirnat N, Gabrovec B. Preventing Frailty Through Healthy Environments: The Slovenian Systemic Pre-Frailty Project. Buildings. 2025; 15(17):3182. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15173182
Chicago/Turabian StyleJutraž, Anja, Nina Pirnat, and Branko Gabrovec. 2025. "Preventing Frailty Through Healthy Environments: The Slovenian Systemic Pre-Frailty Project" Buildings 15, no. 17: 3182. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15173182
APA StyleJutraž, A., Pirnat, N., & Gabrovec, B. (2025). Preventing Frailty Through Healthy Environments: The Slovenian Systemic Pre-Frailty Project. Buildings, 15(17), 3182. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15173182