Quality of life and multimorbidity of elderly outpatients.

Clinics (Sao Paulo)

Department of Internal Medicine, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil.

Published: August 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • Research shows that while there's a clear link between illness and quality of life, evidence is lacking for stable chronic diseases.
  • The study aimed to find how multimorbidity affects the quality of life in elderly patients with stable chronic conditions using specific quality of life and illness scales.
  • Results indicated an inverse relationship between multimorbidity and quality of life, particularly affecting physical and psychological aspects, highlighting that patients’ perceptions of their health are key to their quality of life assessments.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Substantial medical research has established an inverse relationship between quality of life and illness. However, there exists minimal evidence for such a connection in the context of stable and controlled diseases.

Objective: We wished to correlate multimorbidity with quality of life for elderly patients who suffer from stable chronic diseases.

Methods: We used a tool to evaluate quality of life, namely World Health Organization quality of life-BRIEF, together with a scale of multimorbidity known as the Cumulative Illness Rating Scale - Geriatric Version. Furthermore, the quality of life data were correlated with scores recorded on the Cumulative Illness Rating Scale - Geriatric Version, the number of drugs used, and individual perceptions of health and age.

Results: We studied 104 elderly patients who suffered from chronic diseases. The patients had exhibited neither acute events nor secondary complications, their cognition was intact, and they were functionally independent. The Cumulative Illness Rating Scale - Geriatric Version showed an inverse correlation with the physical domain (p= 0.008) and a tendency toward an inverse correlation with the psychological domain (p= 0.052). Self-perception of health showed a high correlation with the physical domain (p= 0.000), psychological domain (p= 0.000) and environmental domain (p= 0.000). The number of drugs used correlated only with the physical domain (p= 0.004). Age and social domain showed a tendency toward a positive correlation (p= 0.054).

Discussion: We uncovered an inverse relationship between quality of life and multimorbidity in a group of patients who suffered from stable chronic diseases, with no functional limitations, pain or complications. Our data suggest that a patient's knowledge that they have a certain clinical condition changes their subjective assessment of quality of life in the related domain.

Conclusion: The perceived quality of life of the sample was affected by multimorbidity in the physical domain, with a tendency toward commensurate effects in the psychological domain.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2671977PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s1807-59322009000100009DOI Listing

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