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Multimorbidity, Frailty and Diabetes in Older People-Identifying Interrelationships and Outcomes

Journal

JOURNAL OF PERSONALIZED MEDICINE
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jpm12111911

Keywords

older people; diabetes; multimorbidity; frailty; outcomes

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Multimorbidity and frailty are common in older people with diabetes and are associated with adverse outcomes, including increased healthcare utilization, disability risk, and mortality risk. Mental health disorders may enhance the risk of adverse outcomes related to multimorbidity. Comprehensive diabetes management, including screening and management of mental health disorders, is necessary.
Multimorbidity and frailty are highly prevalent in older people with diabetes. This high prevalence is likely due to a combination of ageing and diabetes-related complications and other diabetes-associated comorbidities. Both multimorbidity and frailty are associated with a wide range of adverse outcomes in older people with diabetes, which are proportionally related to the number of morbidities and to the severity of frailty. Although, the multimorbidity pattern or cluster of morbidities that have the most adverse effect are not yet well defined, it appears that mental health disorders enhance the multimorbidity-related adverse outcomes. Therefore, comprehensive diabetes guidelines that incorporate a holistic approach that includes screening and management of mental health disorders such as depression is required. The adverse outcomes predicted by multimorbidity and frailty appear to be similar and include an increased risk of health care utilisation, disability and mortality. The differential effect of one condition on outcomes, independent of the other, still needs future exploration. In addition, prospective clinical trials are required to investigate whether interventions to reduce multimorbidity and frailty both separately and in combination would improve clinical outcomes.

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