Department of Statistics, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
Health Promot Chronic Dis Prev Can. 2017 Jul;37(7):215-222. doi: 10.24095/hpcdp.37.7.02.
The Public Health Agency of Canada's Canadian Chronic Disease Surveillance System (CCDSS) uses a validated, standardized methodology to estimate prevalence of individual chronic diseases, such as diabetes. Expansion of the CCDSS for surveillance of multimorbidity, the co-occurrence of two or more chronic diseases, could better inform health promotion and disease prevention. The objective of this study was to assess the feasibility of using the CCDSS to estimate multimorbidity prevalence.
We used administrative health data from seven provinces and three territories and five validated chronic conditions (i.e. cardiovascular disease, respiratory disease, mental illness, hypertension and diabetes) to estimate multimorbidity prevalence. We produced age-standardized (using Canada's 1991 population) and age-specific estimates for two multimorbidity definitions: (1) two or more conditions, and (2) three or more conditions from the five validated conditions, by sex, fiscal year and geography.
Among Canadians aged 40 years and over in the fiscal year 2011/12, the prevalence of two or more and three or more chronic conditions was 26.5% and 10.2%, respectively, which is comparable to other estimates based on administrative health data. The increase in multimorbidity prevalence with increasing age was similar across provinces. The difference in prevalence for males and females varied by province and territory. We observed substantial variation in estimates over time. Results were consistent for the two definitions of multimorbidity.
The CCDSS methodology can produce comparative estimates of multimorbidity prevalence across provinces and territories, but there are challenges in using it to estimate temporal trends. Further expansion of the CCDSS in the number and breadth of validated case definitions will improve the accuracy of multimorbidity surveillance for the Canadian population.
加拿大公共卫生署的加拿大慢性病监测系统(CCDSS)使用经过验证的标准化方法来估计个体慢性病(如糖尿病)的患病率。扩展 CCDSS 以监测多种疾病(两种或多种慢性病同时发生)可以更好地为健康促进和疾病预防提供信息。本研究的目的是评估使用 CCDSS 估计多种疾病患病率的可行性。
我们使用来自七个省和三个地区的行政健康数据以及五种经过验证的慢性病(即心血管疾病、呼吸系统疾病、精神疾病、高血压和糖尿病)来估计多种疾病的患病率。我们按性别、财政年度和地理位置生成了年龄标准化(使用加拿大 1991 年人口)和特定年龄的估计值,用于两种多种疾病定义:(1)两种或更多种疾病,以及(2)五种经过验证的疾病中三种或更多种疾病。
在 2011/12 财政年度,年龄在 40 岁及以上的加拿大人中,两种或多种慢性疾病和三种或多种慢性疾病的患病率分别为 26.5%和 10.2%,这与基于行政健康数据的其他估计值相当。随着年龄的增长,多种疾病的患病率呈上升趋势,各省之间的情况相似。男性和女性之间的患病率差异因省和地区而异。我们观察到随着时间的推移,估计值存在很大差异。两种多种疾病定义的结果一致。
CCDSS 方法可以在各省和地区之间产生多种疾病患病率的可比估计值,但在使用它来估计时间趋势方面存在挑战。进一步扩展 CCDSS 在验证病例定义的数量和广度方面,将提高对加拿大人口多种疾病监测的准确性。