Department of Social Preventive Medical Sciences, Center for Preventive Medical Sciences, Chiba University, Chiba City, Chiba, Japan.
Department of Family Medicine, Tesshoukai, Kameda Family Clinic Tateyama, Tateyama City, Chiba, Japan.
J Prim Care Community Health. 2024 Jan-Dec;15:21501319241293717. doi: 10.1177/21501319241293717.
No municipal-level study has elucidated the social determinants associated with multimorbidity prevalence (MP).
This article aimed to determine the differences in MP among municipalities and investigate factors associated with such differences through an ecological study of data obtained from a nationwide survey. This article focused on social participation and household income, which are associated with single chronic diseases, such as hypertension.
Study design was a cross sectional study, which used the data from the Japan Gerontological Evaluation Study, a population-based gerontological study among functionally independent older adults aged ≥65 years in Japan. Overall, 152 212 participants from 2016 to 2017 across 91 municipalities were included in the final analysis. Multiple regression analysis was performed with MP as objective variable; social participation or household income were explanatory variables, and education, population density, and health check-ups were adjustment variables.
Intermunicipal differences in MP were 28.4% to 43.1% and 23.2% to 38.8% among men and women, respectively. Significant negative correlation was observed between MP and proportion of social participation (non-standardized coefficient [] = -.18 for men and women). A significant positive correlation was noted between MP and equivalent household income of ≤2 million yen in women ( = .21).
Considerable differences in MP existed among municipalities. Areas with high proportion of social participation showed significantly lower MP. Considering the difficulty in managing multimorbidity within the primary care field and limited evidence on effective interventions, community-level interventions encouraging social participation among older individuals might reduce MP. Primary care physicians should consider a community health approach for multimorbidity.
尚无市级研究阐明与多种疾病患病率(MP)相关的社会决定因素。
本研究旨在通过对全国性调查数据进行的生态研究,确定各城市之间 MP 的差异,并调查与这些差异相关的因素。本文重点关注与高血压等单一慢性病相关的社会参与度和家庭收入。
本研究采用了横断面研究设计,使用了日本老年人评估研究的数据,该研究是一项针对日本功能独立的 65 岁及以上老年人的基于人群的老年学研究。共有来自 91 个城市的 152212 名参与者于 2016 年至 2017 年期间纳入最终分析。将 MP 作为因变量,社会参与或家庭收入作为自变量,教育、人口密度和健康检查作为调整变量,进行多元回归分析。
男性和女性的 MP 城市间差异分别为 28.4%至 43.1%和 23.2%至 38.8%。MP 与社会参与比例呈显著负相关(男性和女性的标准化系数 [β]分别为-.18)。女性的 MP 与≤200 万日元的家庭等效收入呈显著正相关(β=.21)。
MP 在各城市之间存在较大差异。社会参与度较高的地区,MP 明显较低。考虑到基层医疗领域管理多种疾病的难度以及有效干预措施的证据有限,鼓励老年人参与社区活动的社区层面干预措施可能会降低 MP。初级保健医生应考虑采用社区卫生方法来管理多种疾病。