Trajectories in Outpatient Care for People with Multimorbidity: A Population-Based Register Study in Denmark

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Standard

Trajectories in Outpatient Care for People with Multimorbidity : A Population-Based Register Study in Denmark. / Bell, Cathrine; Prior, Anders; Frølich, Anne; Appel, Charlotte Weiling; Vedsted, Peter.

I: Clinical Epidemiology, Bind 14, 2022, s. 749-762.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Bell, C, Prior, A, Frølich, A, Appel, CW & Vedsted, P 2022, 'Trajectories in Outpatient Care for People with Multimorbidity: A Population-Based Register Study in Denmark', Clinical Epidemiology, bind 14, s. 749-762. https://doi.org/10.2147/CLEP.S363654

APA

Bell, C., Prior, A., Frølich, A., Appel, C. W., & Vedsted, P. (2022). Trajectories in Outpatient Care for People with Multimorbidity: A Population-Based Register Study in Denmark. Clinical Epidemiology, 14, 749-762. https://doi.org/10.2147/CLEP.S363654

Vancouver

Bell C, Prior A, Frølich A, Appel CW, Vedsted P. Trajectories in Outpatient Care for People with Multimorbidity: A Population-Based Register Study in Denmark. Clinical Epidemiology. 2022;14:749-762. https://doi.org/10.2147/CLEP.S363654

Author

Bell, Cathrine ; Prior, Anders ; Frølich, Anne ; Appel, Charlotte Weiling ; Vedsted, Peter. / Trajectories in Outpatient Care for People with Multimorbidity : A Population-Based Register Study in Denmark. I: Clinical Epidemiology. 2022 ; Bind 14. s. 749-762.

Bibtex

@article{2210f01b1a8a4d9a99d2443b73a566d5,
title = "Trajectories in Outpatient Care for People with Multimorbidity: A Population-Based Register Study in Denmark",
abstract = "Background: Multimorbidity is a global health challenge. Individuals with multimorbidity are frequent users of healthcare services, and many experience fragmented healthcare. We assessed the number of outpatient trajectories and contacts with hospital outpatient clinics for individuals with multimorbidity and explored different time intervals for the occurrence of concurrent outpatient trajectories. Methods: A population-based cohort of 1.3 million residents, ≥18 years, with multimorbidity was identified through Danish national health registries. Multimorbidity was defined as having two or more of 39 specific chronic conditions. Nine disease system categories were used to categorize outpatient contacts in 2018 into outpatient trajectories and trajectory-related contacts. We defined an “outpatient trajectory” as two contacts within 12 consecutive months for the same medical condition. All outpatient contacts and trajectories with related contacts were counted for 2018. The impact of different time intervals on the number of concurrent trajectories was analyzed. Results: On 1 January 2019, 29% of the adult Danish population was classified as multimorbid. During 2018, 68% of them had ≥1 outpatient contact (median: 2 (IQI: 0–4)). Twenty-six percent had ≥1 outpatient trajectory. The median number of trajectory contacts was 3 (IQI: 2–5). The 4% of individuals with ≥2 outpatient trajectories accounted for 28% of trajectory contacts. During the 6-week period from the latest outpatient contact, 33% of all patients with ≥2 trajectories in 2018 experienced concurrent trajectories with outpatient contact. Conclusion: Two-thirds of adult Danes with multimorbidity attended an outpatient clinic in 2018, and one-fourth had at least one outpatient trajectory. Individuals with two or more trajectories represented 4% and comprised 28% of the trajectory contacts; 33% had concurrent trajectories within a 6-week period. It appears that a small proportion place demands on outpatient clinics because of frequent attendance. A more uniform way of organizing outpatient trajectories for these patients merits consideration.",
keywords = "healthcare utilization, hospital, multimorbidity, outpatient, prevalence, trajectory",
author = "Cathrine Bell and Anders Prior and Anne Fr{\o}lich and Appel, {Charlotte Weiling} and Peter Vedsted",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 Bell et al.",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.2147/CLEP.S363654",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "749--762",
journal = "Clinical Epidemiology",
issn = "1179-1349",
publisher = "Dove Medical Press Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Trajectories in Outpatient Care for People with Multimorbidity

T2 - A Population-Based Register Study in Denmark

AU - Bell, Cathrine

AU - Prior, Anders

AU - Frølich, Anne

AU - Appel, Charlotte Weiling

AU - Vedsted, Peter

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 Bell et al.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Background: Multimorbidity is a global health challenge. Individuals with multimorbidity are frequent users of healthcare services, and many experience fragmented healthcare. We assessed the number of outpatient trajectories and contacts with hospital outpatient clinics for individuals with multimorbidity and explored different time intervals for the occurrence of concurrent outpatient trajectories. Methods: A population-based cohort of 1.3 million residents, ≥18 years, with multimorbidity was identified through Danish national health registries. Multimorbidity was defined as having two or more of 39 specific chronic conditions. Nine disease system categories were used to categorize outpatient contacts in 2018 into outpatient trajectories and trajectory-related contacts. We defined an “outpatient trajectory” as two contacts within 12 consecutive months for the same medical condition. All outpatient contacts and trajectories with related contacts were counted for 2018. The impact of different time intervals on the number of concurrent trajectories was analyzed. Results: On 1 January 2019, 29% of the adult Danish population was classified as multimorbid. During 2018, 68% of them had ≥1 outpatient contact (median: 2 (IQI: 0–4)). Twenty-six percent had ≥1 outpatient trajectory. The median number of trajectory contacts was 3 (IQI: 2–5). The 4% of individuals with ≥2 outpatient trajectories accounted for 28% of trajectory contacts. During the 6-week period from the latest outpatient contact, 33% of all patients with ≥2 trajectories in 2018 experienced concurrent trajectories with outpatient contact. Conclusion: Two-thirds of adult Danes with multimorbidity attended an outpatient clinic in 2018, and one-fourth had at least one outpatient trajectory. Individuals with two or more trajectories represented 4% and comprised 28% of the trajectory contacts; 33% had concurrent trajectories within a 6-week period. It appears that a small proportion place demands on outpatient clinics because of frequent attendance. A more uniform way of organizing outpatient trajectories for these patients merits consideration.

AB - Background: Multimorbidity is a global health challenge. Individuals with multimorbidity are frequent users of healthcare services, and many experience fragmented healthcare. We assessed the number of outpatient trajectories and contacts with hospital outpatient clinics for individuals with multimorbidity and explored different time intervals for the occurrence of concurrent outpatient trajectories. Methods: A population-based cohort of 1.3 million residents, ≥18 years, with multimorbidity was identified through Danish national health registries. Multimorbidity was defined as having two or more of 39 specific chronic conditions. Nine disease system categories were used to categorize outpatient contacts in 2018 into outpatient trajectories and trajectory-related contacts. We defined an “outpatient trajectory” as two contacts within 12 consecutive months for the same medical condition. All outpatient contacts and trajectories with related contacts were counted for 2018. The impact of different time intervals on the number of concurrent trajectories was analyzed. Results: On 1 January 2019, 29% of the adult Danish population was classified as multimorbid. During 2018, 68% of them had ≥1 outpatient contact (median: 2 (IQI: 0–4)). Twenty-six percent had ≥1 outpatient trajectory. The median number of trajectory contacts was 3 (IQI: 2–5). The 4% of individuals with ≥2 outpatient trajectories accounted for 28% of trajectory contacts. During the 6-week period from the latest outpatient contact, 33% of all patients with ≥2 trajectories in 2018 experienced concurrent trajectories with outpatient contact. Conclusion: Two-thirds of adult Danes with multimorbidity attended an outpatient clinic in 2018, and one-fourth had at least one outpatient trajectory. Individuals with two or more trajectories represented 4% and comprised 28% of the trajectory contacts; 33% had concurrent trajectories within a 6-week period. It appears that a small proportion place demands on outpatient clinics because of frequent attendance. A more uniform way of organizing outpatient trajectories for these patients merits consideration.

KW - healthcare utilization

KW - hospital

KW - multimorbidity

KW - outpatient

KW - prevalence

KW - trajectory

U2 - 10.2147/CLEP.S363654

DO - 10.2147/CLEP.S363654

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35686026

AN - SCOPUS:85132269545

VL - 14

SP - 749

EP - 762

JO - Clinical Epidemiology

JF - Clinical Epidemiology

SN - 1179-1349

ER -

ID: 343133431