A Systematic Review of Prevalence Studies on Multimorbidity: Toward a More Uniform Methodology
Université de Sherbrooke · Centre de Santé et de Services Sociaux de Chicoutimi · +1 more institution
Abstract
We searched the literature for English- and French-language articles published between 1980 and September 2010 that described the prevalence of multimorbidity in the general population, in primary care, or both. We assessed quality of included studies with a modified version of the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology checklist. Results of individual prevalence studies were adjusted so that they could be compared graphically.
The final sample included 21 articles: 8 described studies conducted in primary care, 12 in the general population, and 1 in both. All articles were of good quality. The largest differences in prevalence of multimorbidity were observed at age 75 in both primary care (with prevalence ranging from 3.5% to 98.5% across studies) and the general population (with prevalence ranging from 13.1% to 71.8% across studies). Apart from differences in geographic settings, we identified differences in recruitment method and sample size (primary care: 980-60,857 patients; general population: 1,099-316,928 individuals), data collection, and the operational definition of multimorbidity used, including the number of diagnoses considered (primary care: 5 to all; general population: 7 to all). This last aspect seemed to be the most important factor in estimating prevalence.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 32.75
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 36
Authors
5- MFMartin FortinCorresponding
Université de Sherbrooke
- MSMoira Stewart
Centre de Santé et de Services Sociaux de Chicoutimi, Western University
- MPMarie-Ève Poitras
Centre de Santé et de Services Sociaux de Chicoutimi
- JAJordi Almirall
Université de Sherbrooke, Centre de Santé et de Services Sociaux de Chicoutimi
- HMHeather Maddocks
Western University
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Checklist
- Observational study
- Epidemiology
- Population
- Multimorbidity
- Primary care
- Medical diagnosis
- Good health and well-being