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Título Social inequalities in multimorbidity patterns in Europe: A multilevel latent class analysis using the European Social Survey (ESS)
Autores ÁLVAREZ GÁLVEZ, JAVIER, CARRETERO BRAVO, JESÚS ANGEL, Suarez-LIedo, Victor , Ortega-Martin, Esther , Ramos-Fiol, Begona , Lagares-Franco, Carolina , O'Ferrall-Gonzalez, Cristina , Almenara-Barrios, Jose , Gonzalez-Caballero, Juan Luis
Publicación externa Si
Medio SSM Popul. Health
Alcance Article
Naturaleza Científica
Cuartil JCR 1
Cuartil SJR 1
Impacto JCR 4.7
Impacto SJR 1.785
Web https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85140969824&doi=10.1016%2fj.ssmph.2022.101268&partnerID=40&md5=c7bba26a8b670e2107d57051a0afa5e2
Fecha de publicacion 01/12/2022
ISI 000881765700004
Scopus Id 2-s2.0-85140969824
DOI 10.1016/j.ssmph.2022.101268
Abstract Multimorbidity is associated with lower quality of life, greater disability and higher use of health services and is one of the main challenges facing governments in Europe. There is a need to identify and characterize patterns of chronic conditions and analyse their association with social determinants not only from an individual point of view but also from a collective point of view. This paper aims to respond to this knowledge gap by detecting patterns of chronic conditions and their social determinants in 19 European countries from a multilevel perspective. We used data from the ESS round 7. The final sample consisted of 18,933 individuals over 18 years of age, and patterns of multimorbidity from 14 chronic conditions were detected through Multilevel Latent Class Analysis, which also allows detecting similarities between countries. Gender, Age, Housing Location, Income Level and Educational Level were used as individual covariates to determine possible associations with social inequalities. The goodness-of-fit indices derived in a model with six multimorbidity patterns and five countries clusters. The six patterns were "Back, Digestive and Headaches", "Allergies and Respiratory", "Complex Multi -morbidity", "Cancer and Cardiovascular", "Musculoskeletal" and "Cardiovascular"; the five clusters could be associated with some geographical areas or welfare states. Patterns showed significant differences in the cova-riates of interest, with differences in education and income being of particular interest. Some significant dif-ferences were found among patterns and the country groupings. Our findings show that chronic diseases tend to appear in a combined and interactive way, and socioeconomic differences in the occurrence of patterns are not only of the individual but also of group importance, emphasising how the welfare states in each country can influence in the health of their inhabitants.
Palabras clave Multimorbidity; Health inequalities; Socioeconomic status; Multilevel latent class analysis; Patterns of chronic conditions; European countries
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