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Patterns of multimorbidity and their association with hospitalisation: a population-based study of older adults in urban Tanzania.

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dc.creator Tomita, Andrew
dc.creator Leyna, Germana
dc.creator Kim, Hae-Young
dc.creator Moodley, Yoshan
dc.creator Mogeni, Polycarp
dc.creator Cuadros, Diego
dc.creator Dzomba, Armstrong
dc.creator Vandormael, Alain
dc.creator Bärnighausen, Till
dc.creator Tanser, Frank
dc.creator Mpolya, Emmanuel
dc.date 2021-04-01T08:44:40Z
dc.date 2021-04-01T08:44:40Z
dc.date 2021-03-26
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T09:20:31Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T09:20:31Z
dc.identifier https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afab046
dc.identifier https://dspace.nm-aist.ac.tz/handle/20.500.12479/1150
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/95005
dc.description Background while the HIV epidemic remains a considerable challenge in sub-Saharan Africa, a dramatic reduction in the associated mortality has led to a fundamental shift in the public health priorities aimed at tackling multimorbidity. Against the unprecedented level of urbanisation taking place in Tanzania, the burden of multimorbidity and its consequences among ageing adults, in the form of costly inpatient hospitalisation, remain unquantified. Methods we used data from one of Africa’s largest urban population cohort, the Dar es Salaam Health and the Demographic Surveillance System, to quantity the extent of multimorbidity (occurrence of 2 ≥ health conditions) and discordant multimorbidity (occurrence of conditions in 2 ≥ domains in mental health, non-communicable and communicable health) among 2,299 adults aged ≥40 years in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. We fitted logistic regression models to investigate the association between multimorbidity and inpatient hospitalisation. Results the prevalence of multimorbidity and discordant multimorbidity were 25.3 and 2.5%, respectively. Although the severe forms of multimorbidity (2.0% with ≥4 health conditions) and discordancy were low, hospitalisation was significantly higher based on the regression analyses. Household food insecurity was the only socio-economic variable that was significantly and consistently associated with a greater hospitalisation. Conclusion we found an alarmingly high degree of multimorbidity among this ageing urban population where hospitalisation was driven by multimorbidity. As public health resources remain scarce, reducing costly inpatient hospitalisation requires multilevel interventions that address clinical- and structural-level challenges (e.g. food insecurity) to mitigate multimorbidity and promote long-term healthy independent living among older adults in Tanzania.
dc.description This research article published by Oxford University Press, 2021
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher Oxford University Press
dc.subject Hospitalisation
dc.subject Multimorbidity
dc.subject Older people
dc.title Patterns of multimorbidity and their association with hospitalisation: a population-based study of older adults in urban Tanzania.


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