4.2 Article

Association of self-rated health with multimorbidity, chronic disease and psychosocial factors in a large middle-aged and older cohort from general practice: a cross-sectional study

Journal

BMC FAMILY PRACTICE
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12875-014-0185-6

Keywords

General practice/family medicine; General integrated subjective health multimorbidity comorbidity

Funding

  1. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)
  2. National School for Primary Care Research
  3. Medical Research Council UK [G9502233, G0300128]
  4. Cancer Research UK [C865/A2883]
  5. European Union
  6. Stroke Association
  7. Research into Ageing
  8. British Heart Foundation
  9. Department of Health
  10. Wellcome Trust
  11. Medical Research Council [G0401527, G0300128, G1000143] Funding Source: researchfish
  12. National Institute for Health Research [CL-2008-14-006, NF-SI-0512-10114, NIHR/CS/010/024, NF-SI-0508-10072] Funding Source: researchfish
  13. MRC [G0300128] Funding Source: UKRI

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Background: The prevalence of coexisting chronic conditions (multimorbidity) is rising. Disease labels, however, give little information about impact on subjective health and personal illness experience. We aim to examine the strength of association of single and multimorbid physical chronic diseases with self-rated health in a middle-aged and older population in England, and to determine whether any association is mediated by depression and other psychosocial factors. Methods: 25 268 individuals aged 39 to 79 years recruited from general practice registers in the European Prospective Investigation of Cancer (EPIC-Norfolk) study, completed a survey including self-rated health, psychosocial function and presence of common physical chronic conditions (cancer, stroke, heart attack, diabetes, asthma/bronchitis and arthritis). Logistic regression models determined odds of moderate/poor compared to good/excellent health by condition and number of conditions adjusting for psychosocial measures. Results: One-third (8252) reported one, around 7.5% (1899) two, and around 1% (194) three or more conditions. Odds of moderate/poor self-rated health worsened with increasing number of conditions (one (OR = 1.3(1.2-1.4)) versus three or more (OR = 3.4(2.3-5.1)), and were highest where there was comorbidity with stroke (OR = 8.7(4.6-16.7)) or heart attack (OR = 8.5(5.3-13.6)). Psychosocial measures did not explain the association between chronic diseases and multimorbidity with self-rated health. The relationship of multimorbidity with self-rated health was particularly strong in men compared to women (three or more conditions: men (OR = 5.2(3.0-8.9)), women OR = 2.1(1.1-3.9)). Conclusions: Self-rated health provides a simple, integrative patient-centred assessment for evaluation of illness in the context of multiple chronic disease diagnoses. Those registering in general practice in particular men with three or more diseases or those with cardiovascular comorbidities and with poorer self-rated health may warrant further assessment and intervention to improve their physical and subjective health.

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