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Comorbidity in primary care - causal or casual? A longitudinal observational study in family medicine.
- Source :
-
BMC primary care [BMC Prim Care] 2024 Aug 02; Vol. 25 (1), pp. 279. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Aug 02. - Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- Background: Comorbidity is increasingly important in the medical literature, with ever-increasing implications for diagnosis, treatment, prognosis, management and health care. The objective of this study is to measure casual versus causal comorbidity in primary care in three family practice populations.<br />Methods: This is a longitudinal observational study using the Transition Project datasets. Transition Project family doctors in the Netherlands, Malta and Serbia recorded details of all patient contacts in an episode of care structure using electronic medical records and the International Classification of Primary Care, collecting data on all elements of the doctor-patient encounter, including diagnoses (1,178,178 in the Netherlands, 93,606 in Malta, 405,150 in Serbia), observing 158,370 patient years in the Netherlands, 43,577 in Malta, 72,673 in Serbia. Comorbidity was measured using the odds ratio of both conditions being incident or rest-prevalent in the same patient in one-year dataframes, as against not, corrected for the prior probability of such co-occurrence, between the 41 joint most prevalent (joint top 20) episode titles in the three populations. Specific associations were explored in different age groups to observe the changes in odds ratios with increasing age as a surrogate for a temporal or biological gradient.<br />Results: The high frequency of observed comorbidity with low consistency in both clinically and statistically significant odds ratios across populations indicates more casual than causal associations. A causal relationship would be expected to be manifest more consistently across populations. Even in the minority of cases where odds ratios were consistent between countries and numerically larger, those associations were observed to weaken with increasing patient age.<br />Conclusion: After applying accepted criteria for testing the causality of associations, most observed primary care comorbidity is due to chance, likely as a result of increasing illness diversity.<br />Trial Registration: This study was performed on electronic patient record datasets made publicly available by the University of Amsterdam Department of General Practice, and did not involve any patient intervention.<br /> (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Subjects :
- Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Middle Aged
Adult
Netherlands epidemiology
Male
Female
Aged
Adolescent
Young Adult
Serbia epidemiology
Family Practice
Malta epidemiology
Child
Child, Preschool
Infant
Electronic Health Records statistics & numerical data
Infant, Newborn
Odds Ratio
Prevalence
Aged, 80 and over
Primary Health Care statistics & numerical data
Comorbidity
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 2731-4553
- Volume :
- 25
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- BMC primary care
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 39095697
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-024-02513-2