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Different Multimorbidity Measures Result in Varying Estimated Levels of Physical Quality of Life in Individuals with Multimorbidity: A Cross-Sectional Study in the General Population

Authors :
José Almirall
Mireille Lambert
Martin Fortin
Jeannie Haggerty
Aline Ramond-Roquin
Université d'Angers - Faculté de médecine (UA UFR Médecine)
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire d'Angers (CHU Angers)
PRES Université Nantes Angers Le Mans (UNAM)-PRES Université Nantes Angers Le Mans (UNAM)-Université d'Angers (UA)
Laboratoire d'Ergonomie et d'Épidémiologie en Santé au Travail (LEEST)
Université d'Angers (UA)-Centre Hospitalier Universitaire d'Angers (CHU Angers)
PRES Université Nantes Angers Le Mans (UNAM)-PRES Université Nantes Angers Le Mans (UNAM)-Institut de Veille Sanitaire (INVS)
PRES Université Nantes Angers Le Mans (UNAM)-PRES Université Nantes Angers Le Mans (UNAM)-Université d'Angers (UA)-Institut de Veille Sanitaire (INVS)
Source :
BioMed Research International, Vol 2016 (2016), BioMed Research International, BioMed Research International, Hindawi Publishing Corporation, 2016, 2016 (7845438), pp.1-9. ⟨10.1155/2016/7845438⟩
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2016.

Abstract

Introduction. Multimorbidity adversely affects health-related quality of life. Methodological factors may impact the magnitude of this relationship.Objective. To evaluate how physical health-related quality of life varies in individuals with multimorbidity depending on the length of the list of candidate conditions considered.Methods. Secondary analysis from PRECISE, a cohort study of the general adult population of Quebec, Canada. Multimorbidity was measured using the 21-chronic condition list from the Disease Burden Morbidity Assessment, and physical health-related quality of life was measured using the physical component summary (PCS) of SF-12v2. The PCS was calculated, (a) using 2 or more conditions from the 21-condition list (MM2+, 21) and then from a reduced 6-condition list (MM2+, 6) and (b) using three or more conditions from each list (MM3+, 21, and MM3+, 6).Results. The analysis included 1,710 individuals (mean age 51.3, 40.5% men). Multimorbidity prevalence ranged from 63.8% (MM2+, 21 conditions) to 3.8% (MM3+, 6 conditions). The mean [95% CI] PCS dropped from 45.7 [CI: 45.0–46.3] (MM2+, 21) to 40.2 [CI: 38.7–41.8] (MM2+, 6) and from 44.2 [CI: 43.4–44.9] (MM3+, 21) to 34.8 [CI: 31.9–37.6] (MM3+, 6).Conclusion. The length of the list of candidate conditions considered has a great impact on the estimations of physical health-related quality of life.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23146141 and 23146133
Volume :
2016
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BioMed Research International
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cc45183daabbac8f2afc11b342439aa1