The influence of age, gender and socio-economic status on multimorbidity patterns in primary care. First results from the multicare cohort study.
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Multimorbidity is a phenomenon with high burden and high prevalence in the elderly. Our previous research has shown that multimorbidity
can be divided into the multimorbidity patterns of 1) anxiety, depression, somatoform disorders (ADS) and pain, and 2) cardiovascular
and metabolic disorders. However, it is not yet known, how these patterns are influenced by patient characteristics. The objective
of this paper is to analyze the association of socio-demographic variables, and especially socio-economic status with multimorbidity
in general and with each multimorbidity pattern.
METHODS
The MultiCare Cohort Study is a multicentre, prospective, observational cohort study of 3.189 multimorbid patients aged 65+
randomly selected from 158 GP practices. Data were collected in GP interviews and comprehensive patient interviews. Missing
values have been imputed by hot deck imputation based on Gower distance in morbidity and other variables. The association
of patient characteristics with the number of chronic conditions is analysed by multilevel mixed-effects linear regression
analyses.
RESULTS
Multimorbidity in general is associated with age (+0.07 chronic conditions per year), gender (-0.27 conditions for female),
education (-0.26 conditions for medium and -0.29 conditions for high level vs. low level) and income (-0.27 conditions per
logarithmic unit). The pattern of cardiovascular and metabolic disorders shows comparable associations with a higher coefficient
for gender (-1.29 conditions for female), while multimorbidity within the pattern of ADS and pain correlates with gender (+0.79
conditions for female), but not with age or socioeconomic status.
CONCLUSIONS
Our study confirms that the morbidity load of multimorbid patients is associated with age, gender and the socioeconomic status
of the patients, but there were no effects of living arrangements and marital status. We could also show that the influence
of patient characteristics is dependent on the multimorbidity pattern concerned, i.e. there seem to be at least two types
of elderly multimorbid patients. First, there are patients with mainly cardiovascular and metabolic disorders, who are more
often male, have an older age and a lower socio-economic status. Second, there are patients mainly with ADS and pain-related
morbidity, who are more often female and equally distributed across age and socio-economic groups.
TRIAL REGISTRATION
ISRCTN89818205.
Links
Authors
Schäfer I, Hansen H, Schön G, Höfels S, Altiner A, Dahlhaus A, Gensichen J, Riedel-Heller S, Weyerer S, Blank WA, König HH, von dem Knesebeck O, Wegscheider K, Scherer M, van den Bussche H, Wiese B
Institution
Department of Primary Medical Care, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany. in.schaefer@uke.uni-hamburg.de
Source
BMC health services research 12: 2012 pg 89MeSH
Age FactorsAged
Aged, 80 and over
Chronic Disease
Cohort Studies
Comorbidity
Diagnosis-Related Groups
Family Practice
Female
Germany
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Humans
International Classification of Diseases
Male
Prevalence
Primary Health Care
Prospective Studies
Quality of Life
Questionnaires
Risk Factors
Sex Factors
Social Class
Pub Type(s)
Journal ArticleMulticenter Study
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Language
eng
PubMed ID
22471952
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