Título
Multimorbidity, Depressive Symptoms, and Self-Reported Health in Older Adults: a Secondary Analysis of the Sabe Bogota Study
Autor
Daniela Camargo
SILVIA LILIANA SUAREZ MONSALVE
MARIO ULISES PEREZ ZEPEDA
María del Carmen García Peña
Carlos Cano
Nivel de Acceso
Acceso Abierto
Materias
MEDICINA Y CIENCIAS DE LA SALUD - (CTI) BIOLOGÍA Y QUÍMICA - (CTI) Multimorbilidad - ([Rev Inves Clin. (2564-8896) vol. 70 (2018)]) Depresión - ([Rev Inves Clin. (2564-8896) vol. 70 (2018)]) Autoevaluación diagnóstica - ([Rev Inves Clin. (2564-8896) vol. 70 (2018)]) Envejecimiento - ([Rev Inves Clin. (2564-8896) vol. 70 (2018)]) Multimorbidity - ([Rev Inves Clin. (2564-8896) vol. 70 (2018)]) Depression - ([Rev Inves Clin. (2564-8896) vol. 70 (2018)]) Diagnostic Self Evaluation - ([Rev Inves Clin. (2564-8896) vol. 70 (2018)]) Aging - ([Rev Inves Clin. (2564-8896) vol. 70 (2018)])
Resumen o descripción
Background: Multimorbidity and depressive symptoms (DSs) are common in older adults. Self-rated health (SRH) allows detection of elderly adults with a high burden of multimorbidity plus depression. The aim of this study was to test the association of groups of multimorbidity and DS on SRH in Colombian older adults.
Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study in 2012 in Bogotá, Colombia, called “Salud, Bienestar y Envejecimiento” (Health, Well-being, and Aging), including 2000 community-dwelling adults 60 years of age or older. SRH was assessed with the question “How would you rate your health?” giving five possible answers. DSs were rated using the 15-question version of the geriatric depression scale, and multimorbidity was defined as having two or more chronic diseases. A logistic regression model was used to identify the association between grouped DS and multimorbidity with SRH.
Results: Groups were distributed as follows: 678 with no DS/no multimorbidity (33.9%), 808 with only multimorbidity (40%), 128 with DS only (6.4%), and 386 with DS/multimorbidity (19.3%). An association of fair/poor SRH with DS/multimorbidity group was found (odds ratio 5.5; 95% confidence interval 3.86-7.95, p < 0.001) when compared to subjects without any of those conditions. Conclusion: There was an incremental association between DS and multimorbidity with SRH. An older adult referring to his or her own health with a negative connotation should alert to a higher burden of diseases, including DS.
Editor
Comisión Coordinadora de Institutos Nacionales de Salud y Hospitales de Alta Especialidad (CCINSHAE)
Fecha de publicación
2018
Tipo de publicación
Artículo
Recurso de información
Formato
Adobe PDF
application/pdf
Fuente
Rev Inves Clin. (2564-8896) vol. 70 (2018)
Idioma
Inglés
Relación
http://clinicalandtranslationalinvestigation.com/frame_esp.php?id=181
Repositorio Orígen
INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE GERIATRIA
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