2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0160264
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Time Trends in Prevalence of Chronic Diseases and Multimorbidity Not Only due to Aging: Data from General Practices and Health Surveys

Abstract: IntroductionChronic diseases and multimorbidity are common and expected to rise over the coming years. The objective of this study is to examine the time trend in the prevalence of chronic diseases and multimorbidity over the period 2001 till 2011 in the Netherlands, and the extent to which this can be ascribed to the aging of the population.MethodsMonitoring study, using two data sources: 1) medical records of patients listed in a nationally representative network of general practices over the period 2002–201… Show more

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Cited by 218 publications
(190 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
(19 reference statements)
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“…However, other risk factors for dependency have improved over past decades with reductions in stroke incidence 28 and in dementia prevalence 9 reported in the USA and reductions in dementia incidence reported in the UK 8 . Nevertheless, even with reductions in incidence or prevalence of chronic conditions, the ageing of the population means a substantial increase in the number of older people with long-term conditions and with multiple concurrent conditions because multimorbidity is the norm for very old people, who are the fastest growing demographic; 29 however, population ageing might explain only up to half of past rises in multimorbidity prevalence 30 . In the future, although young-old cohorts are more likely to enter old age independent, the proportion of the population who are multimorbid is forecast to rise with each successive cohort, 7 and these result in a lower likelihood of recovery of independence, particularly in men, and therefore a greater likelihood of higher dependency with further ageing.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, other risk factors for dependency have improved over past decades with reductions in stroke incidence 28 and in dementia prevalence 9 reported in the USA and reductions in dementia incidence reported in the UK 8 . Nevertheless, even with reductions in incidence or prevalence of chronic conditions, the ageing of the population means a substantial increase in the number of older people with long-term conditions and with multiple concurrent conditions because multimorbidity is the norm for very old people, who are the fastest growing demographic; 29 however, population ageing might explain only up to half of past rises in multimorbidity prevalence 30 . In the future, although young-old cohorts are more likely to enter old age independent, the proportion of the population who are multimorbid is forecast to rise with each successive cohort, 7 and these result in a lower likelihood of recovery of independence, particularly in men, and therefore a greater likelihood of higher dependency with further ageing.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The prevalence of chronic diseases is rising, resulting in a greater health burden and increased polypharmacy with more risks for patients if therapy management and monitoring are not carried out optimally . Pharmacist intervention in the management of chronic conditions, such as in cardiovascular disease and diabetes mellitus, has the potential to ease the workload of physicians and allow them to dedicate more time to complicated cases, in the interest of patient safety and well‐being …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Multimorbidity increased from 13% to 16% and from 14% to 17%, respectively; aging of the population explained part of these trends [32].…”
Section: Changes In the Prevalence Of Selected Diseases Presenting Fomentioning
confidence: 99%