District maps tell you which part of Kent carries the most frailty risk — but a district is over a hundred thousand people. This tool goes one level deeper: it ranks named neighbourhoods of roughly 7,500 residents, so outreach teams know where to set up first.
This page chooses the postcodes. The rest of the Assistiv toolkit does the finding.
Use the community touchpoints map to find the pharmacy, library, church hall or community centre inside the neighbourhood.
The assistiv.tools voice screen asks twelve friendly questions and scores frailty risk (PRISMA-7) on the spot — no clinician needed.
Anyone flagged gets a structured summary their GP practice can act on. Each screening also quietly tests whether this page sent you to the right place.
Places, not people. These scores describe neighbourhoods, never individuals. A high rank means more people worth reaching are likely to live there — it says nothing about any one person or household, and no figure below neighbourhood level is ever published.
The "prescribing trend" signal watches for neighbourhoods where prescriptions linked to frailty — sleep medication, nutrition supplements, memory drugs — have risen over the last three months. Rising prescriptions often appear long before anyone calls 999. Full sourcing and limits on the methodology page.