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Annals of Family Medicine 5:395-402 (2007)
© 2007 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.
doi: 10.1370/afm.722

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Barriers to Self-Management and Quality-of-Life Outcomes in Seniors With Multimorbidities

Elizabeth A. Bayliss, MD, MSPH1,2, Jennifer L. Ellis, MSPH1 and John F. Steiner, MD, MPH3

1 Kaiser Permanente Clinical Research Unit, Denver, Colo
2 Department of Family Medicine, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colo
3 Colorado Health Outcomes Program, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colo

CORRESPONDING AUTHOR: Elizabeth A. Bayliss, MD, MSPH,Clinical Research Unit, Kaiser Permanente PO Box 378066 Denver, CO 80237–8066 Elizabeth.Bayliss{at}kp.org

PURPOSE Persons with multiple chronic diseases must integrate self-management tasks for potentially interacting conditions to attain desired clinical outcomes. Our goal was to identify barriers to self-management that were associated with lower perceived health status and, secondarily, with lower reported physical functioning for a population of seniors with multimorbidities.

METHODS We conducted a cross-sectional telephone survey of 352 health maintenance organization members aged 65 years or older with, at a minimum, coexisting diagnoses of diabetes, depression, and osteoarthritis. Validated questions were based on previous qualitative interviews that had elicited potential barriers to the self-management process for persons with multimorbidities. We analyzed associations between morbidity burden, potential barriers to self-management, and the 2 outcomes using multivariate linear regression modeling.

RESULTS Our response rate was 47%. Sixty-six percent of respondents were female; 55% were aged 65 to 74 years, and 45% were aged 75 years or older. Fifty percent reported fair or poor health. On average they had 8.7 chronic diseases. In multivariate analysis, higher level of morbidity, lower level of physical functioning, less knowledge about medical conditions, less social activity, persistent depressive symptoms, greater financial constraints, and male sex were associated with lower perceived health status. Potential barriers to self-management significantly associated with lower levels of physical functioning were higher level of morbidity, greater financial constraints, greater number of compound effects of conditions, persistent depressive symptoms, higher level of patient-clinician communication, and lower income.

CONCLUSIONS In addition to morbidity burden, specific psychosocial factors are independently associated with lower reported health status and lower reported physical functioning in seniors with multimorbidities. Many factors are amenable to intervention to improve health outcomes.

Key Words: Comorbidity • self-care • geriatrics • health status




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TRACK Comments:

Read all TRACK Comments

Towards a research agenda on multimorbidity
Martin Fortin
Annals of Family Medicine, 10 Oct 2007 [Full text]
A Call for Conceptual Clarify
Barbara J. Riegel
Annals of Family Medicine, 15 Oct 2007 [Full text]
Elders face Complex Problems in Chronic Disease Self-Management
Perry C. Goldstein
Annals of Family Medicine, 2 Jan 2008 [Full text]
Author's response
Elizabeth A. Bayliss
Annals of Family Medicine, 7 Jan 2008 [Full text]



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