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既往合并症对损伤后恢复速度的影响:一项纵向队列研究。

The role of pre-existing comorbidity on the rate of recovery following injury: A longitudinal cohort study.

机构信息

Injury Prevention Research Unit, Department of Preventive and Social Medicine, Dunedin School of Medicine, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.

Department of Preventive and Social Medicine, Dunedin School of Medicine, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2018 Feb 21;13(2):e0193019. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193019. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

Understanding the role of comorbidity in recovery following injury is an important challenge given the increasing prevalence of multimorbidity (2 or more comorbidities) in many countries. The Prospective Outcomes of Injury Study recruited 2856 injured 18-64 year olds that had registered for entitlements with New Zealand's universal no-fault injury insurer. Recovery, or lack of, in this longitudinal cohort was measured using the World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule at 3, 12 and 24 months post-injury. Twenty-one pre-existing chronic conditions were used to identify comorbidity. To investigate whether rates of recovery differed by pre-injury comorbidity, the interaction between time and comorbidity was modelled using Generalised Estimating Equations. Of 1,862 participants with complete data, the distribution reporting none, one comorbidity, or multimorbidity pre-injury was 51%, 27%, and 21% respectively. Longitudinal analysis estimated no difference (log odds per year 0.05, 95% Confidence Interval -0.17 to 0.27) between the rate of change of disability for those with one pre-injury comorbidity compared to those with none. Those with pre-injury multimorbidity had significantly slower reduction in disability over time than those with no pre-injury comorbidity (log odds per year 0.27, 95% Confidence Interval 0.05 to 0.48). In a working age cohort, the rate of recovery in the 24 months following injury was similar for those with none or one pre-existing comorbidity and significantly slower for those with multimorbidity. It is important that further research explores mechanisms driving this, and that researchers and health providers identify and implement better supports for injured people with multimorbidity.

摘要

了解合并症在损伤后恢复中的作用是一个重要的挑战,因为在许多国家,合并症(两种或多种合并症)的患病率不断增加。前瞻性损伤研究招募了 2856 名 18-64 岁的受伤者,这些人已经向新西兰全民无过错伤害保险公司登记领取权益。在这项纵向队列研究中,使用世界卫生组织残疾评估表在受伤后 3、12 和 24 个月测量恢复情况或缺乏恢复情况。使用 21 种预先存在的慢性疾病来确定合并症。为了研究受伤前合并症是否会影响恢复率,使用广义估计方程对时间和合并症之间的相互作用进行建模。在 1862 名具有完整数据的参与者中,报告受伤前无、一种或多种合并症的比例分别为 51%、27%和 21%。纵向分析估计,与无合并症相比,有一种合并症的患者残疾变化率没有差异(每年对数几率 0.05,95%置信区间-0.17 至 0.27)。与无受伤前合并症的患者相比,受伤前患有多种合并症的患者残疾程度随时间的减少速度明显较慢(每年对数几率 0.27,95%置信区间 0.05 至 0.48)。在一个工作年龄队列中,在受伤后 24 个月内,无合并症或仅有一种合并症的患者的恢复率相似,而患有多种合并症的患者的恢复率明显较慢。进一步研究探索驱动这一现象的机制,以及研究人员和医疗保健提供者为患有多种合并症的受伤者确定和实施更好的支持措施非常重要。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/6849/5821361/f577c554b5e7/pone.0193019.g001.jpg

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