Schäfer Ingmar, Hansen Heike, Kaduszkiewicz Hanna, Bickel Horst, Fuchs Angela, Gensichen Jochen, Maier Wolfgang, Riedel-Heller Steffi G, König Hans-Helmut, Dahlhaus Anne, Schön Gerhard, Weyerer Siegfried, Wiese Birgitt, van den Bussche Hendrik, Scherer Martin
Department of Primary Medical Care, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
Institute of General Practice, Medical Faculty, University of Kiel, Kiel, Germany.
J Comorb. 2019 Nov 6;9:2235042X19883560. doi: 10.1177/2235042X19883560. eCollection 2019 Jan-Dec.
Multimorbidity in elderly patients is a major challenge for physicians, because of a high prevalence of and associations with many adverse outcomes. However, the mechanisms of progressing multimorbidity are not well-understood. The aim of our study was to determine if the progression of multimorbidity is influenced by health behaviour and social support and to analyse if the patients' socio-economic status had an effect on these prognostic factors.
The study was designed as prospective cohort study based on interviews of 158 GPs and 3189 patients randomly selected from GP records (response rate: 46.2%). Patients were aged 65-85 years at recruitment and observed in four waves of data collection (dropout rate: 41.5%). Statistical analyses of the 'hot deck' imputed data included multilevel mixed-effects linear regression allowing for random effects at the study centre and GP practice within study centre level.
Regarding cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, multimorbidity progressed more rapidly in patients who reported less physical activity ( = -0.28; 95% confidence interval = -0.35 to -0.20), had more tobacco-related pack years (0.15; 0.07-0.22) and consumed less alcohol (-0.21; -0.31 to -0.12) at baseline. Multimorbidity related to psychiatric and pain-related disorders progressed more rapidly if the patients had less perceived social support (-0.31; -0.55 to -0.07) and reported less physical activity (-0.08; -0.15 to -0.02) at baseline. Education and income only slightly modified the effects of these variables.
Depending on the multimorbidity cluster, different strategies should be used for slowing down the progression of multimorbidity. Changing lifestyle and increasing social support are beneficial for the entire group of elderly multimorbid patients - regardless of their socio-economic status.
ISRCTN89818205.
老年患者的多种疾病并存是医生面临的一项重大挑战,因为其患病率高且与许多不良后果相关。然而,多种疾病并存的进展机制尚未得到充分理解。我们研究的目的是确定多种疾病并存的进展是否受健康行为和社会支持的影响,并分析患者的社会经济状况是否对这些预后因素有影响。
该研究设计为前瞻性队列研究,基于对158名全科医生的访谈以及从全科医生记录中随机选取的3189名患者(应答率:46.2%)。患者在招募时年龄为65 - 85岁,并在四轮数据收集过程中接受观察(失访率:41.5%)。对“热卡填充”数据的统计分析包括多水平混合效应线性回归,考虑了研究中心以及研究中心层面内全科医生诊所的随机效应。
对于心血管和代谢疾病,在基线时报告身体活动较少(=-0.28;95%置信区间=-0.35至-0.20)、吸烟包年数较多(0.15;0.07 - 0.22)以及饮酒较少(-0.21;-0.31至-0.12)的患者,多种疾病并存进展更快。如果患者在基线时感知到的社会支持较少(-0.31;-0.55至-0.07)且报告的身体活动较少(-0.08;-0.15至-0.02),与精神和疼痛相关疾病有关的多种疾病并存进展更快。教育和收入仅对这些变量的影响有轻微改变。
根据多种疾病并存的类别,应采用不同策略来减缓多种疾病并存的进展。改变生活方式和增加社会支持对所有老年多病患者群体有益——无论其社会经济状况如何。
ISRCTN89818205