Literature DB >> 20553636

Including information about co-morbidity in estimates of disease burden: results from the World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys.

J Alonso1, G Vilagut, S Chatterji, S Heeringa, M Schoenbaum, T Bedirhan Üstün, S Rojas-Farreras, M Angermeyer, E Bromet, R Bruffaerts, G de Girolamo, O Gureje, J M Haro, A N Karam, V Kovess, D Levinson, Z Liu, M E Medina-Mora, J Ormel, J Posada-Villa, H Uda, R C Kessler.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The methodology commonly used to estimate disease burden, featuring ratings of severity of individual conditions, has been criticized for ignoring co-morbidity. A methodology that addresses this problem is proposed and illustrated here with data from the World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys. Although the analysis is based on self-reports about one's own conditions in a community survey, the logic applies equally well to analysis of hypothetical vignettes describing co-morbid condition profiles.
METHOD: Face-to-face interviews in 13 countries (six developing, nine developed; n=31 067; response rate=69.6%) assessed 10 classes of chronic physical and nine of mental conditions. A visual analog scale (VAS) was used to assess overall perceived health. Multiple regression analysis with interactions for co-morbidity was used to estimate associations of conditions with VAS. Simulation was used to estimate condition-specific effects.
RESULTS: The best-fitting model included condition main effects and interactions of types by numbers of conditions. Neurological conditions, insomnia and major depression were rated most severe. Adjustment for co-morbidity reduced condition-specific estimates with substantial between-condition variation (0.24-0.70 ratios of condition-specific estimates with and without adjustment for co-morbidity). The societal-level burden rankings were quite different from the individual-level rankings, with the highest societal-level rankings associated with conditions having high prevalence rather than high individual-level severity.
CONCLUSIONS: Plausible estimates of disorder-specific effects on VAS can be obtained using methods that adjust for co-morbidity. These adjustments substantially influence condition-specific ratings.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20553636      PMCID: PMC3045479          DOI: 10.1017/S0033291710001212

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Med        ISSN: 0033-2917            Impact factor:   7.723


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