INTERGRA-CAM proposes a new technological ecosystem that allows home monitoring and follow-up of the intrinsic capacity of the elderly, defined by the World Health Organization as the combination of individual capacities in physical, mental and psychological terms and that encompasses to fragility. This ecosystem enables a comprehensive care model in which all relevant actors are connected: patients, caregivers and health professionals from both primary and specialized care (geriatrics). The intervention through INTEGRA-CAM follows the bases of the model postulated by the WHO (Integrated Care for Older People - ICOPE) of comprehensive care provision, is multifactorial, and includes functional stimulation activities, adaptations on polypharmacy and nutritional recommendations / prescriptions. This personalized intervention is supported by the previous research experience of the Getafe University Hospital team in European projects such as VIVIFRAIL (physical activity program) or MIDFRAIL (multicomponent intervention: education, physical and nutritional exercise) as well as other accepted criteria such as STOPP- START (polypharmacy). The objective of this project is twofold. On the one hand, it is intended to detect frailty early to avoid disability and dependency, which has a direct implication not only in the well-being of the elderly but also in the sustainability of health systems. On the other hand, INTEGRA-CAM also seeks to improve health care for the elderly by shifting the nucleus of geriatric care from a reactive, clinical, specialized care environment to a preventive, comprehensive, home and community setting, duly coordinated with geriatric hospital care. INTEGRA-CAM supports 1) the comprehensive geriatric evaluation of the elderly through a multidimensional approach (comorbidity, psychological disorders, functional status, nutrition, physical condition, socio-economic evaluation), which allows the estimation of intrinsic capacity and the state of frailty, and 2) decision-making for the individualized management of frailty. In this way, the technological architecture of the system consists of a double loop: an internal one for home monitoring, and an external one that supports the services and resources of the part dedicated to patient assessment. The benefits of incorporating the INTEGRA-CAM technological ecosystem will be demonstrated through a randomized clinical study that will initially deploy the ecosystem in part of the area of influence of the Getafe University Hospital, for later, and based on the learning of this first pilot, extend it to the rest of the Autonomous Community of Madrid.