Hazell Matthew, Kengne Andre Pascal, Gill Paramjit, Taylor Dylan, Uthman Olalekan
Warwick Applied Health, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, United Kingdom.
Department of Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2025 May 9;5(5):e0004603. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0004603. eCollection 2025.
Multimorbidity in Sub-Saharan Africa is under researched and includes distinct disease combinations to those seen in high income countries. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence and distribution of multimorbidity in South Africa, as well as the associated individual, area-level and contextual factors.
Multilevel logistic regression analyses were conducted on nationally representative 2016 South Africa Demographic Health Survey Data. The sample included 5,592 individuals (level 1) living in 691 neighbourhoods (level 2).
Multimorbidity was present in 45.3% of the study population, ranging from 35.6% in Limpopo to 52.1% in Eastern Cape. Hypertension was the most prevalent condition (46.4%) followed by diabetes (22.6%). Individuals aged 65-95 had 11.57 times higher odds (95% CI 8.50-15.74) of multimorbidity compared to those aged 15-24. Women had nearly twice the odds of men (OR 1.95, 95% CI 1.68-1.27). Formerly married individuals had 1.63 times higher odds (95% CI 1.32-2.02) than never married. Compared to Black Africans, White individuals had 44% lower odds (OR 0.56, 95% CI 0.39-0.82) and those of mixed ethnicity had 31% lower odds (OR 0.69, 95% CI 0.51-0.92). Obesity increased the odds by 38% (OR 1.38, 95% CI 1.17-1.64) and occupational smoke exposure by 26% (OR 1.26, 95% CI 1.07-1.49). There was variation in multimorbidity at the neighbourhood level, with 2.9% of the variation attributable to contextual factors in the empty model. The median odds ratio was 1.35, indicating substantially higher odds of multimorbidity if an individual moved to a higher risk neighbourhood.
This study found a high burden of multimorbidity in South Africa patterned by demographic, socioeconomic, lifestyle and contextual factors. The results highlight the need for multilevel strategies to reduce multimorbidity and its inequities by addressing individual risk factors as well as neighbourhood-level determinants of health.
撒哈拉以南非洲地区的多重疾病负担研究较少,且存在与高收入国家不同的疾病组合。本研究旨在确定南非多重疾病的患病率和分布情况,以及相关的个体、地区层面和背景因素。
对具有全国代表性的2016年南非人口健康调查数据进行多水平逻辑回归分析。样本包括居住在691个社区(二级层面)的5592名个体(一级层面)。
45.3%的研究人群存在多重疾病,从林波波省的35.6%到东开普省的52.1%不等。高血压是最常见的疾病(46.4%),其次是糖尿病(22.6%)。65 - 95岁的个体患多重疾病的几率是15 - 24岁个体的11.57倍(95%置信区间8.50 - 15.74)。女性患多重疾病的几率几乎是男性的两倍(比值比1.95,95%置信区间1.68 - 1.27)。曾经结婚的个体患多重疾病的几率比从未结婚的个体高1.63倍(95%置信区间1.32 - 2.02)。与非洲黑人相比白人患多重疾病的几率低44%(比值比0.56,95%置信区间0.39 - 0.82),混血种族个体低31%(比值比0.69,95%置信区间0.51 - 0.92)。肥胖使患病几率增加38%(比值比1.38,95%置信区间1.17 - 1.64),职业性烟雾暴露使患病几率增加26%(比值比1.26,95%置信区间1.07 - 1.49)。社区层面的多重疾病存在差异,空模型中2.9%的差异可归因于背景因素。中位数比值比为1.35,表明如果个体搬到风险更高的社区,患多重疾病的几率会大幅增加。
本研究发现南非多重疾病负担较高,受人口统计学、社会经济、生活方式和背景因素影响。结果强调需要采取多水平策略,通过解决个体风险因素以及社区层面的健康决定因素来降低多重疾病及其不平等现象。