Abstract

Multimorbidity is a growing issue and poses a major challenge to health care systems around the world. Multimorbidity is related to ageing but many studies have now shown that it is also socially patterned, being more common and occurring at an earlier age in areas of high socioeconomic deprivation. There is lack of research on patients with multimorbidity, and thus guidelines are based on single-conditions. Polypharmacy is common in multimorbidity, increasing drug-disease and drug-drug interactions. Multimorbid patients need holistic care, but secondary care services are highly specialised and thus are often duplicative and fragmented and thus increase treatment burden in multimorbid patients. The cost of care is high in multimorbidity, due to high rates of primary and secondary care consultations and unplanned hospital admissions. The combination of mental and physical conditions increases complexity of care, and costs. Mental-physical multimorbidity is especially common in deprived areas.General practitioners and primary care teams have a key role in managing patients with multimorbidity, using a patient-centred generalist approach. Consultation length and continuity of care may need to be substantially enhanced in order to enable such patients. This will require a radical change in how health care systems are organised and funded in order to effectively meet the challenges of multimorbidity.

Highlights

  • Multimorbidity, commonly defined as the co-existence of two or more chronic conditions within an individual [1], is the norm in ageing populations around the world [2]

  • Evidence base and guidelines Research and guidelines on the management of long term conditions has routinely focused on single diseases [2, 5]

  • This has led to individual disease management rather than a more holistic approach [5]

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Summary

Introduction

Multimorbidity, commonly defined as the co-existence of two or more chronic conditions within an individual [1], is the norm in ageing populations around the world [2]. Evidence base and guidelines Research and guidelines on the management of long term conditions has routinely focused on single diseases [2, 5]. This has led to individual disease management rather than a more holistic approach [5]. There is a an urgent need for more interventions to be tested in pragmatic trials in multimorbid populations, especially in relation to health inequalities, and for these to inform future guidelines.

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