Abstract

Multimorbidity has received much attention and there is a growing number of original studies. However, randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have failed to demonstrate effectiveness of interventions aimed at improving outcomes for patient with multimorbidity in primary care. The purpose of this article is to synthesize and analyze the most recent RCTs to identify the factors that may have contribute to the success or lack of success in order to draw lessons to inform further development in intervention research. A scoping review was conducted to include current up-to-date state-of-the-art studies in primary care published from 2019. Nine articles reporting on six RCTs studies were included in the review. The findings were mixed, with primary outcomes showing no differences between intervention and control groups in four of the six but differences in secondary outcomes in all six. All studies involved family practice patients but interventions took place at different sites, and the time between the beginning of the intervention and the time of evaluation of outcomes varied across studies. Authors reported issues regarding the need for training of care teams, the roles and composition of the teams, the selection of patients and implementation barriers of the complex interventions in trying contexts with not enough time for the changes required. The randomized controlled design may not be the best evaluation design given the complexity of the interventions, and alternative designs should be considered in which qualitative components are included. Further attention to outcome measures and to equity issues is recommended.

Highlights

  • Multimorbidity, the presence of two or more long-term conditions, has received much attention among decision makers, researchers and clinicians in the recent years (1)

  • Most of them have reported neutral effects or mixed results. These studies offer a valuable source of information to learn from in order to pave the way for future research in this area in Multimorbidity: Randomized Controlled Trial Lessons primary care

  • The central research question of this scoping review was: which factors may have contributed to the success or lack of success in randomized trials of interventions aimed at improving outcomes for patients with multimorbidity?

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Summary

Introduction

Multimorbidity, the presence of two or more long-term conditions, has received much attention among decision makers, researchers and clinicians in the recent years (1). Despite a growing number of original studies, randomized trials have failed to demonstrate effectiveness of interventions aimed at improving outcomes for patient with multimorbidity in primary care (2). Most of them have reported neutral effects or mixed results. These studies offer a valuable source of information to learn from in order to pave the way for future research in this area in Multimorbidity: Randomized Controlled Trial Lessons primary care. Which are the best interventions to manage these patients? It is a question to which primary care providers are trying to respond. Research is needed to answer it correctly

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