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Multimorbidity and associations with clinical outcomes in a middle-aged population in Iran: a longitudinal cohort study

Authors :
Maria Lisa Odland
Samiha Ismail
Sadaf G Sepanlou
Hossein Poustchi
Alireza Sadjadi
Akram Pourshams
Tom Marshall
Miles D Witham
Reza Malekzadeh
Justine I Davies
Source :
BMJ GLOBAL HEALTH
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BackgroundAs the populations of lower-income and middle-income countries age, multimorbidity is increasing, but there is little information on its long-term consequences. We aimed to show associations between multimorbidity and outcomes of mortality and hospitalisation in Iran, a middle-income country undergoing rapid economic transition.MethodsWe conducted a secondary analysis of longitudinal data collected in the Golestan Cohort Study. Data on demographics, morbidities and lifestyle factors were collected at baseline, and information on hospitalisations or deaths was captured annually. Logistic regression was used to analyse the association between baseline multimorbidity and 10-year mortality, Cox-proportional hazard models to measure lifetime risk of mortality and zero-inflation models to investigate the association between hospitalisation and multimorbidity. Multimorbidity was classified as ≥2 conditions or number of conditions. Demographic, lifestyle and socioeconomic variables were included as covariables.ResultsThe study recruited 50 045 participants aged 40–75 years between 2004 and 2008, 47 883 were available for analysis, 416 (57.3%) were female and 12 736 (27.94%) were multimorbid. The odds of dying at 10 years for multimorbidity defined as ≥2 conditions was 1.99 (95% CI 1.86 to 2.12, pConclusionThe long-terms effects of multimorbidity on mortality and hospitalisation are similar in this population to those seen in high-income countries.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ GLOBAL HEALTH
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6c9be84629351db4b3911ca1c5816c7e