a Department of Behavioral Sciences and Health Education , Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University , Atlanta , GA , USA.
b Department of Health Policy & Management , Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University , Atlanta , GA , USA.
Psychol Health Med. 2017 Jul;22(6):727-735. doi: 10.1080/13548506.2016.1227855. Epub 2016 Sep 3.
The health of individuals in the U.S.A. is increasingly being defined by complexity and multimorbidity. We examined the patterns of co-occurrence of mental illness, substance abuse/dependence, and chronic medical conditions and the cumulative burden of these conditions and living in poverty on self-rated health. We conducted a secondary data analysis using publically-available data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), which is an annual nationally-representative survey. Pooled data from the 2010-2012 NSDUH surveys included 115,921 adults 18 years of age or older. The majority of adults (52.2%) had at least one type of condition (mental illness, substance abuse/dependence, or chronic medical conditions), with substantial overlap across the conditions. 1.2%, or 2.2 million people, reported all three conditions. Generally, as the number of conditions increased, the odds of reporting worse health also increased. The likelihood of reporting fair/poor health was greatest for people who reported AMI, chronic medical conditions, and poverty (AOR = 9.41; 95% CI: 7.53-11.76), followed by all three conditions and poverty (AOR = 9.32; 95% CI: 6.67-13.02). For each combination of conditions, the addition of poverty increased the likelihood of reporting fair/poor health. Traditional conceptualizations of multimorbidity should be expanded to take into account the complexities of co-occurrence between mental illnesses, chronic medical conditions, and socioeconomic factors.
美国个体的健康状况越来越受到复杂性和多种疾病的影响。我们研究了精神疾病、物质滥用/依赖和慢性疾病同时发生的模式,以及这些疾病和贫困状况对自我报告健康状况的累积负担。我们使用了来自国家药物使用与健康调查(NSDUH)的公共数据进行二次数据分析,该调查是一项年度全国代表性调查。来自 2010-2012 年 NSDUH 调查的综合数据包括 115921 名 18 岁或以上的成年人。大多数成年人(52.2%)至少有一种疾病(精神疾病、物质滥用/依赖或慢性疾病),这些疾病之间存在大量重叠。有 1.2%(或 220 万人)报告了所有三种疾病。一般来说,随着疾病数量的增加,报告健康状况较差的几率也会增加。报告 AMI、慢性疾病和贫困的人报告健康状况不佳的可能性最大(AOR=9.41;95%CI:7.53-11.76),其次是所有三种疾病和贫困(AOR=9.32;95%CI:6.67-13.02)。对于每种疾病组合,贫困的增加都增加了报告健康状况不佳的可能性。应该扩大对多种疾病的传统概念,以考虑到精神疾病、慢性疾病和社会经济因素之间同时发生的复杂性。