key: cord-0830277-j7ii1nhp authors: Jouffroy, Romain; Vivien, Benoît title: The impact of frailty on survival in elderly intensive care patients with COVID‑19: do not dismiss intensive care unit overcrowding date: 2021-06-30 journal: Crit Care DOI: 10.1186/s13054-021-03653-y sha: fc3d3a15952e99fd49998ec34031ac2e2fddb596 doc_id: 830277 cord_uid: j7ii1nhp nan Recently in the Journal, Jung et al. [1] reported that frailty, age and comorbidities provide relevant prognostic information among elderly COVID-19 patients admitted to intensive care unit (ICU). While we fully agree with the authors claiming that the decision-making process relies on multi-components, COVID-19 pandemic, per se, implies cautions for the results interpretation. Firstly, the unprecedented influx of patients into hospitals and ICUs faced the physicians to a supplemental issue, the mismatch between means and resources [2, 3] . That was a crux in some low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs), at the origin of difficult daily triage decisions against the backdrop of severe shortages of basic equipment and consumables [4] . Secondly, the wide disparity for the reasons and the use of end-of-life care decisions due to cultural considerations could have induced a bias in this multicenter study from 28 countries. Thirdly, it would have been more representative to include in the analysis all frail patients: those younger than 70 years old, and those not admitted in ICU whatever the underlying reason [3, 5] . Last but not least, the relative weight of frailty, age and comorbidities covariates on outcome would be helpful to physicians in the day-by-day decision-making process, but the question is if one factor should be more important to consider than the others? Nevertheless, beyond all these limitations, we fully agree with Jung et al. that frailty assessment is one of the utmost important elements to take into account among COVID-19 patients, especially in elderlies [1] . • fast, convenient online submission Ready to submit your research Ready to submit your research ? Choose BMC and benefit from: ? Choose BMC and benefit from: The impact of frailty on survival in elderly intensive care patients with COVID-19: the COVIP study Admission decisions to intensive care units in the context of the major COVID-19 outbreak: local guidance from the COVID-19 Paris-region area Managing intensive care admissions when there are not enough beds during the COVID-19 pandemic: a systematic review COVID-19: a heavy toll on health-care workers Lattanzio F. Frailty and COVID-19: a systematic scoping review Publisher's Note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations Authors' contributions RJ and BV wrote and revised the manuscript. Both authors read and approved the final manuscript.