Prevalence of multimorbidity in community settings: A systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies
Abstract
With ageing world populations, multimorbidity (presence of two or more chronic diseases in the same individual) becomes a major concern in public health. Although multimorbidity is associated with age, its prevalence varies. This systematic review aimed to summarise and meta-analyse the prevalence of multimorbidity in high, low- and middle-income countries (HICs and LMICs).
Studies were identified by searching electronic databases (Medline, Embase, PsycINFO, Global Health, Web of Science and Cochrane Library). The term ‘multimorbidity’ and its various spellings were used, alongside ‘prevalence’ or ‘epidemiology’. Quality assessment employed the Newcastle-Ottawa scale. Overall and stratified analyses according to multimorbidity operational definitions, HICs/LMICs status, gender and age were performed. A random-effects model for meta-analysis was used.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 36.41
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 96
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Multimorbidity
- Meta-analysis
- Observational study
- PsycINFO
- Confidence interval
- MEDLINE
- Epidemiology