| Literature DB >> 35174048 |
Pascal Geldsetzer1,2, Jan-Walter De Neve2, Viswanathan Mohan3, Dorairaj Prabhakaran4, Ambuj Roy5, Nikhil Tandon6, Justine I Davies7,8,9, Sebastian Vollmer10, Till Bärnighausen2,11,12, Jonas Prenissl2.
Abstract
Background: The prevalence of multimorbidity in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is thought to be rising rapidly. Research on the state of healthcare for multimorbidity in LMICs is needed to provide an impetus for integration of care across conditions, a baseline to monitor progress, and information for targeting of interventions to those most in need. Focusing on multimorbid cardiometabolic disease in India, this study thus aimed to determine 1) the proportion of adults with co-morbid diabetes and hypertension who successfully completed each step of the chronic disease care continuum from diagnosis to control for both conditions, and 2) how having additional cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors is associated with health system performance along the care continuum for diabetes, hypertension, and co-morbid diabetes and hypertension.Entities:
Keywords: India; cardiometabolic diseases; health system performance; multimorbidity
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35174048 PMCID: PMC8815445 DOI: 10.5334/gh.1056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Heart ISSN: 2211-8160
Sample characteristics.1
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| CHARACTERISTIC | TOTAL | FEMALE | MALE |
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| N | 734794 | 628997 | 105797 |
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| Diabetes, n (%) | 20300 (2·8) | 16186 (2·6) | 4114 (3·9) |
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| Hypertension, n (%) | 130324 (17·7) | 108133 (17·2) | 22191 (21·0) |
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| Age Group, n (%), years | |||
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| 15–19 | 131180 (17·9) | 113255 (18·0) | 17925 (16·9) |
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| 20–24 | 115584 (15·7) | 100109 (15·9) | 15475 (14·6) |
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| 25–29 | 112842 (15·4) | 97751 (15·5) | 15091 (14·3) |
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| 30–34 | 102252 (13·9) | 88465 (14·1) | 13787 (13·0) |
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| 35–39 | 98826 (13·4) | 85618 (13·6) | 13208 (12·5) |
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| 40–44 | 85079 (11·6) | 73670 (11·7) | 11409 (10·8) |
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| 45–49 | 80817 (11·0) | 70129 (11·1) | 10688 (10·1) |
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| 50–54 | 8214 (1·1) | – | 8214 (7·8) |
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| | 0 (0·0) | 0 (0·0) | 0 (0·0) |
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| Education, n (%) | |||
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| < Primary school | 238788 (32·5) | 217540 (34·6) | 21248 (20·1) |
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| Primary school completed | 49127 (6·7) | 42383 (6·7) | 6744 (6·4) |
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| Secondary school unfinished | 295492 (40·2) | 245899 (39·1) | 49593 (46·9) |
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| Secondary school or above | 151387 (20·6) | 123175 (19·6) | 28212 (26·7) |
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| | 0 (0·0) | 0 (0·0) | 0 (0·0) |
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| Household wealth quintile, n (%) | |||
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| Q1 (Poorest) | 135426 (18·4) | 117136 (18·6) | 18290 (17·3) |
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| Q2 | 145921 (19·9) | 125363 (19·9) | 20558 (19·4) |
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| Q3 | 151445 (20·6) | 129777 (20·6) | 21668 (20·5) |
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| Q4 | 149181 (20·3) | 126996 (20·2) | 22185 (21·0) |
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| Q5 (Richest) | 152821 (20·8) | 129725 (20·6) | 23096 (21·8) |
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| | 0 (0·0) | 0 (0·0) | 0 (0·0) |
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| BMI, n (%) | |||
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| <18·5 kg/m2 | 159996 (21·8) | 139780 (22·2) | 20216 (19·1) |
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| 18·5–22·9 kg/m2 | 342101 (46·6) | 291976 (46·4) | 50125 (47·4) |
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| 23·0–24·9 kg/m2 | 96420 (13·1) | 79872 (12·7) | 16548 (15·6) |
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| 25·0–27·4 kg/m2 | 69622 (9·5) | 58506 (9·3) | 11116 (10·5) |
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| 27·5–29·9 kg/m2 | 35432 (4·8) | 30735 (4·9) | 4697 (4·4) |
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| ≥ 30·0 kg/m2 | 30189 (4·1) | 27316 (4·3) | 2873 (2·7) |
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| | 1034 (0·1) | 812 (0·1) | 222 (0·2) |
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| Tobacco consumption, n (%) | |||
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| Current smoker | 42487 (5·8) | 13147 (2·1) | 29340 (27·7) |
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| | 0 (0·0) | 0 (0·0) | 0 (0·0) |
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| Currently married, n (%) | 506850 (69·0) | 440207 (70·0) | 66643 (63·0) |
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| 0 (0·0) | 0 (0·0) | 0 (0·0) |
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| Urban area, n (%) | 217024 (29·5) | 183852 (29·2) | 33172 (31·4) |
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| 0 (0·0) | 0 (0·0) | 0 (0·0) |
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Abbreviations: n = number; Q = quintile.
1 The numbers and percentages in this table were not weighted using sampling weights.
Individual-level predictors of reaching each cascade step among those with co-morbid diabetes and hypertension.1,2
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| AWARE | TREATED | CONTROLLED | ||||||
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| Female | 1·71 (1·52–1·92) | <0·001 | 1·85 (1·54–2·21) | <0·001 | 2·27 (1·55–3·32) | <0·001 | ||
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| Age group, y | ||||||||
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| 15–19 | 1·00 (Reference) | 1·00 (Reference) | 1·00 (Reference) | |||||
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| 20–24 | 1·15 (0·66–1·99) | 0·631 | 0·50 (0·16–1·57) | 0·235 | 0·40 (0·11–1·39) | 0·148 | ||
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| 25–29 | 1·08 (0·63–1·85) | 0·778 | 0·76 (0·29–1·94) | 0·56 | 0·38 (0·13–1·16) | 0·088 | ||
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| 30–34 | 0·95 (0·56–1·61) | 0·843 | 0·62 (0·25–1·56) | 0·314 | 0·14 (0·05–0·45) | 0·001 | ||
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| 35–40 | 1·08 (0·64–1·82) | 0·778 | 0·94 (0·38–2·30) | 0·894 | 0·24 (0·08–0·69) | 0·008 | ||
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| 40–44 | 1·14 (0·68–1·92) | 0·617 | 1·23 (0·51–2·98) | 0·649 | 0·28 (0·10–0·77) | 0·014 | ||
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| 45–49 | 1·38 (0·82–2·31) | 0·224 | 1·70 (0·70–4·12) | 0·239 | 0·37 (0·13–1·03) | 0·058 | ||
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| 50–54 | 1·71 (0·99–2·95) | 0·055 | 1·99 (0·79–5·00) | 0·145 | 0·42 (0·13–1·36) | 0·148 | ||
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| Household wealth quintile | ||||||||
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| Q1 (Poorest) | 1·00 (Reference) | 1·00 (Reference) | 1·00 (Reference) | |||||
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| Q2 | 1·13 (0·97–1·31) | 0·115 | 1·39 (1·07–1·82) | 0·015 | 0·94 (0·58–1·52) | 0·804 | ||
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| Q3 | 1·22 (1·05–1·42) | 0·008 | 1·43 (1·10–1·85) | 0·008 | 0·84 (0·53–1·35) | 0·482 | ||
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| Q4 | 1·35 (1·17–1·56) | <0·001 | 1·69 (1·30–2·19) | <0·001 | 1·12 (0·70–1·79) | 0·628 | ||
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| Q5 (Richest) | 1·43 (1·23–1·67) | <0·001 | 2·01 (1·54–2·63) | <0·001 | 1·23 (0·75–2·03) | 0·414 | ||
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| Education | ||||||||
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| < Primary school | 1·00 (Reference) | 1·00 (Reference) | 1·00 (Reference) | |||||
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| Primary school finished | 1·09 (0·96–1·23) | 0·175 | 1·12 (0·92–1·36) | 0·248 | 1·17 (0·75–1·81) | 0·482 | ||
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| Secondary school unfinished | 1·13 (1·04–1·23) | 0·006 | 1·05 (0·92–1·21) | 0·441 | 0·92 (0·67–1·27) | 0·625 | ||
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| Secondary school or above | 1·19 (1·06–1·32) | 0·002 | 1·13 (0·95–1·34) | 0·159 | 1·25 (0·84–1·88) | 0·276 | ||
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| Currently married | 1·08 (0·96–1·20) | 0·184 | 1·13 (0·95–1·35) | 0·159 | 1·40 (0·94–2·08) | 0·094 | ||
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| Urban | 1·25 (1·15–1·35) | <0·001 | 1·63 (1·43–1·86) | <0·001 | 1·68 (1·25–2·26) | 0·001 | ||
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Abbreviations: RR = Risk Ratio; CI = Confidence Interval; Q = Quintile.
1 These regressions were run among those with co-morbid diabetes and hypertension, whereby ‘aware,’ ‘treated,’ and ‘controlled’ refers to being aware, treated, and controlled for both conditions. We used the same sample for all three regressions. That is, we did not restrict the sample for ‘treated’ to those who were aware of their co-morbid diabetes and hypertension. Neither did we restrict the sample for ‘controlled’ to those who were treated for their co-morbid diabetes and hypertension.
2 The regressions included all variables listed in the table and a binary indicator for each of 640 districts (district-level fixed effects) as independent variables. All standard errors were adjusted for clustering at the level of the primary sampling unit.
Associations between having multiple cardiovascular disease risk factors (as well as asthma and anemia) and the probability of reaching each cascade step.1,2
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| BP EVER MEASURED | AWARE OF HYPERTENSION | HYPERTENSION TREATED | HYPERTENSION CONTROLLED | |||||
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| Has hypertension and … |
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| diabetes | 1·04 (1·04–1·05) | <0·001 | 1·12 (1·09–1·14) | <0·001 | 1·52 (1·47–1·58) | <0·001 | 1·33 (1·25–1·41) | <0·001 |
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| obesity | 1·02 (1·01–1·03) | <0·001 | 1·01 (1·00–1·03) | 0·063 | 1·30 (1·26–1·34) | <0·001 | 1·08 (1·04–1·13) | <0·001 |
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| smokes | 0·98 (0·97–0·99) | <0·001 | 0·98 (0·96–1·00) | 0·024 | 0·96 (0·92–1·00) | 0·059 | 0·96 (0·91–1·02) | 0·188 |
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| asthma | 1·05 (1·04–1·07) | <0·001 | 1·14 (1·11–1·18) | <0·001 | 1·19 (1·12–1·27) | <0·001 | 1·15 (1·04–1·27) | 0·004 |
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| anemia | 1·02 (1·01–1·02) | <0·001 | 1·09 (1·08–1·10) | <0·001 | 1·12 (1·08–1·15) | <0·001 | 1·23 (1·18–1·28) | <0·001 |
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| Has diabetes and … | – | – |
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| hypertension | – | – | 0·96 (0·93–0·98) | 0·002 | 1·00 (0·97–1·04) | 0·817 | 0·83 (0·79–0·88) | <0·001 |
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| obesity | – | – | 0·92 (0·89–0·94) | <0·001 | 0·94 (0·91–0·97) | 0·001 | 0·82 (0·79–0·88) | <0·001 |
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| smokes | – | – | 1·01 (0·97–1·05) | 0·753 | 0·99 (0·94–1·04) | 0·613 | 1·02 (0·95–1·10) | 0·621 |
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| asthma | – | – | 1·58 (1·53–1·63) | <0·001 | 1·58 (1·49–1·68) | <0·001 | 1·89 (1·76–2·03) | <0·001 |
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| anemia | – | – | 1·02 (0·99–1·05) | 0·245 | 1·01 (0·97–1·05) | 0·715 | 0·99 (0·93–1·04) | 0·642 |
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| Has diabetes, hypertension, and … |
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| obesity | – | – | 1·03 (0·96–1·10) | 0·393 | 1·31 (1·18–1·46) | <0·001 | 1·16 (0·91–1·48) | 0·225 |
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| smokes | – | – | 0·99 (0·88–1·09) | 0·702 | 0·91 (0·77–1·08) | 0·291 | 0·95 (0·64–1·39) | 0·774 |
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| asthma | – | – | 1·63 (1·47–1·81) | <0·001 | 1·37 (1·14–1·66) | 0·001 | 1·93 (1·34–2·78) | <0·001 |
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| anemia | – | – | 1·15 (1·07–1·25) | <0·001 | 1·25 (1·10–1·42) | 0·001 | 1·29 (0·98–1·70) | 0·070 |
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Abbreviations: RR = Risk Ratio; CI = Confidence Interval; BP = Blood pressure.
1 These analyses depict – among each of the three samples (those with hypertension, those with diabetes, and those with co-morbid diabetes and hypertension) – the relative risk of reaching each care cascade step that is associated with having each additional CVD risk factor as well as asthma and anemia.
2 The regressions were run separately for each care cascade step and – in addition to the CVD risk factor, anemia or asthma shown in the table – contained age group, household wealth quintile, education, currently married, urban vs. rural location, sex, and a binary indicator for each of 640 districts (district-level fixed effects) as independent variables. Standard errors were adjusted for clustering at the level of the primary sampling unit.