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Article
Multimorbidity in a marginalised, street-health Australian population: a retrospective cohort study
BMJ Open
  • Tom Brett, University of Notre Dame Australia
  • Diane Arnold-Reed, University of Notre Dame Australia
  • Lakkina Troeung, University of Notre Dame Australia
  • Max Bulsara, University of Notre Dame Australia
  • Annalise Williams
  • Robert G Moorhead, University of Notre Dame Australia
Year of Publication
2014
Abstract

OBJECTIVES:

Demographic and presentation profile of patients using an innovative mobile outreach clinic compared with mainstream practice. DESIGN:

Retrospective cohort study. SETTING:

Primary care mobile street health clinic and mainstream practice in Western Australia. PARTICIPANTS:

2587 street health and 4583 mainstream patients. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:

Prevalence and patterns of chronic diseases in anatomical domains across the entire age spectrum of patients and disease severity burden using Cumulative Illness Rating Scale (CIRS). RESULTS:

Multimorbidity (2+ CIRS domains) prevalence was significantly higher in the street health cohort (46.3%, 1199/2587) than age-sex-adjusted mainstream estimate (43.1%, 2000/4583), p=0.011. Multimorbidity prevalence was significantly higher in street health patients(37.7%, 615/1649) compared with age-sex-adjusted mainstream patients (33%, 977/2961), p=0.003 but significantly lower if 65+ years (62%, 114/184 vs 90.7%, 322/355, p CONCLUSIONS:

Age-sex-adjusted multimorbidity prevalence and disease severity is higher in the street health cohort. Earlier onset (23-34 years) multimorbidity is found in the street health cohort but prevalence is lower in 65+ years than in mainstream patients. Multimorbidity prevalence is higher for Aboriginal patients of all ages.

Keywords
  • primary care,
  • chronic disease,
  • multimorbidity
Citation Information
Tom Brett, Diane Arnold-Reed, Lakkina Troeung, Max Bulsara, et al.. "Multimorbidity in a marginalised, street-health Australian population: a retrospective cohort study" BMJ Open Vol. 4 Iss. 8 (2014) ISSN: 2044-6055
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/max-bulsara/76/