Abstract

BackgroundWe aimed to estimate multimorbidity trajectories and quantify socioeconomic inequalities based on childhood and adulthood socioeconomic position (SEP) in the risks and rates of multimorbidity accumulation across adulthood.Methods and findingsParticipants from the UK 1946 National Survey of Health and Development (NSHD) birth cohort study who attended the age 36 years assessment in 1982 and any one of the follow-up assessments at ages 43, 53, 63, and 69 years (N = 3,723, 51% males). Information on 18 health conditions was based on a combination of self-report, biomarkers, health records, and prescribed medications. We estimated multimorbidity trajectories and delineated socioeconomic inequalities (based on childhood and adulthood social class and highest education) in multimorbidity at each age and in longitudinal trajectories.Multimorbidity increased with age (0.7 conditions at 36 years to 3.7 at 69 years). Multimorbidity accumulation was nonlinear, accelerating with age at the rate of 0.08 conditions/year (95% CI 0.07 to 0.09, p < 0.001) at 36 to 43 years to 0.19 conditions/year (95% CI 0.18 to 0.20, p < 0.001) at 63 to 69 years. At all ages, the most socioeconomically disadvantaged had 1.2 to 1.4 times greater number of conditions on average compared to the most advantaged. The most disadvantaged by each socioeconomic indicator experienced an additional 0.39 conditions (childhood social class), 0.83 (adult social class), and 1.08 conditions (adult education) at age 69 years, independent of all other socioeconomic indicators. Adverse adulthood SEP was associated with more rapid accumulation of multimorbidity, resulting in 0.49 excess conditions in partly/unskilled compared to professional/intermediate individuals between 63 and 69 years. Disadvantaged childhood social class, independently of adulthood SEP, was associated with accelerated multimorbidity trajectories from age 53 years onwards.Study limitations include that the NSHD cohort is composed of individuals of white European heritage only, and findings may not be generalizable to the non-white British population of the same generation and did not account for other important dimensions of SEP such as income and wealth.ConclusionsIn this study, we found that socioeconomically disadvantaged individuals have earlier onset and more rapid accumulation of multimorbidity resulting in widening inequalities into old age, with independent contributions from both childhood and adulthood SEP.

Highlights

  • The management of long-term chronic health conditions poses a serious challenge for public healthcare systems worldwide [1,2]

  • We found that socioeconomically disadvantaged individuals have earlier onset and more rapid accumulation of multimorbidity resulting in widening inequalities into old age, with independent contributions from both childhood and adulthood socioeconomic position (SEP)

  • This study examines multimorbidity development across adulthood and into older ages and investigates in detail socioeconomic inequalities in multimorbidity trajectories in a Inequalities in multimorbidity across the lifecourse prospective nationally representative birth cohort study

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Summary

Introduction

The management of long-term chronic health conditions poses a serious challenge for public healthcare systems worldwide [1,2]. Conditions associated with unhealthy lifestyles, such as obesity, hypertension, diabetes, and coronary heart disease are increasingly common, while greater life expectancies mean individuals live longer with chronic disease. These conditions rarely occur in isolation, multimorbidity—2 or more chronic conditions in an individual—is a rising consequence [3]. Most studies on the epidemiology of multimorbidity, and those that have investigated socioeconomic inequalities, have largely been cross-sectional in design [2,4,12,13,15,17,23]. AWUe :aPimleeadsetcooensfitrimtahtaetamlluhletaimdionrgbliedvietylstarraejreecptroersienstaedncdoqrrueacntltyi:fy socioeconomic inequalities based on childhood and adulthood socioeconomic position (SEP) in the risks and rates of multimorbidity accumulation across adulthood

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