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Effect of Chronic Diseases and Multimorbidity on Survival and Functioning in Elderly Adults
Author(s) -
Rizzuto Debora,
Melis René J. F.,
Angleman Sara,
Qiu Chengxuan,
Marengoni Alessandra
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of the american geriatrics society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.992
H-Index - 232
eISSN - 1532-5415
pISSN - 0002-8614
DOI - 10.1111/jgs.14868
Subject(s) - medicine , years of potential life lost , population , quality of life (healthcare) , cohort , gerontology , multimorbidity , comorbidity , epidemiology , demography , cohort study , pediatrics , life expectancy , environmental health , nursing , sociology
Objectives To determine the effect of chronic disorders and their co‐occurrence on survival and functioning in community‐dwelling older adults. Design Population‐based cohort study. Setting Kungsholmen, Stockholm, Sweden. Participants Individuals aged 78 and older examined by physicians four times over 11 years (N = 1,099). Measurements Chronic diseases (grouped according to 10 organ systems according to the International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, code) and multimorbidity (≥2 coexisting chronic diseases) were evaluated in terms of mortality, population attributable risk of death, median years of life lost, and median survival time with and without disability (need of assistance in ≥1 activities of daily living). Results Approximately one in four deaths were attributable to cardiovascular and one in six to neuropsychiatric diseases. Malignancy was the condition with the shortest survival time (2.5 years). Malignancies and cardiovascular disorders each accounted for approximately 5 years of life lost. In contrast, neurosensorial and neuropsychiatric conditions had the longest median survival time (>6 years), and affected people were disabled for more than half of this time. The most‐prevalent and ‐burdensome condition was multimorbidity, affecting 70.4% of the population, accounting for 69.3% of total deaths, and causing 7.5 years of life lost. Finally, people with multimorbidity lived 81% of their remaining years of life with disability (median 5.2 years). Conclusion Survival in older adults differs in length and quality depending on specific conditions. The greatest negative effect at the individual (shorter life, greater dependence) and societal (number of attributable deaths, years spent with disability) level was from multimorbidity, which has made multimorbidity a clinical and public health priority.