Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3466226 European Journal of Internal Medicine 2015 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The prevalence of multimorbidity was 92%.•Multimorbidity was higher among those not living alone and for the lower age range.•Men and people aged over 84 obtained better scores of quality of life.•Multimorbidity and being a woman were associated with a worse quality of life.•Parkinson was the chronic disease which most negatively affected quality of life.

IntroductionMultimorbidity is more common in the elderly population and negatively affects health-related quality of life (QoL). The aims of the study were to report the QoL of users of the Basque telecare public service (BTPS) and to establish its relationship with multimorbidity.MethodsThe EuroQol questionnaire was administered to 1125 users of the service. Their sociodemographic and healthcare characteristics were obtained from BTPS databases and the Basque healthcare service. Multiple regression analysis was performed on the overall questionnaire index to determine the effect of chronic diseases and sociodemographic. Moreover, the effects of the different diseases on specific dimensions of the test were explored by logistic regression.ResultsOf the users interviewed, 82% were women, 88% ≥ 75 years and 66% lived alone. The average of chronic pathologies was higher among men (5.3 vs. 4.6), for the lower age range and among those not living alone (P < 0.001). For QoL, men and people aged over 84 obtained better scores (0.64 and 0.61, respectively). Worse QoL was associated with being a woman, multimorbidity, and living with one or more people. The existence of multimorbidity meant impaired QoL of 2.6 points for each additional disease over the overall score (P < 0.001).ConclusionsThis study reveals that for the population covered by BTPS the impact of chronic pathologies, multimorbidity and their social context affects QoL very diversely. These diverse social and healthcare needs of community-dwelling elders allow the development and implementation of personalised services, such as telecare that facilitate them to remain at home.

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