The role of pre-existing comorbidity on the rate of recovery following injury: A longitudinal cohort study.

Understanding the role of comorbidity in recovery following injury is an important challenge given the increasing prevalence of multimorbidity (2 or more comorbidities) in many countries. The Prospective Outcomes of Injury Study recruited 2856 injured 18-64 year olds that had registered for entitlem...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gabrielle Davie, Ari Samaranayaka, Sarah Derrett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5821361?pdf=render
id doaj-d3edee18868d4454b6169b82c7cce722
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d3edee18868d4454b6169b82c7cce7222020-11-25T02:05:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01132e019301910.1371/journal.pone.0193019The role of pre-existing comorbidity on the rate of recovery following injury: A longitudinal cohort study.Gabrielle DavieAri SamaranayakaSarah DerrettUnderstanding the role of comorbidity in recovery following injury is an important challenge given the increasing prevalence of multimorbidity (2 or more comorbidities) in many countries. The Prospective Outcomes of Injury Study recruited 2856 injured 18-64 year olds that had registered for entitlements with New Zealand's universal no-fault injury insurer. Recovery, or lack of, in this longitudinal cohort was measured using the World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule at 3, 12 and 24 months post-injury. Twenty-one pre-existing chronic conditions were used to identify comorbidity. To investigate whether rates of recovery differed by pre-injury comorbidity, the interaction between time and comorbidity was modelled using Generalised Estimating Equations. Of 1,862 participants with complete data, the distribution reporting none, one comorbidity, or multimorbidity pre-injury was 51%, 27%, and 21% respectively. Longitudinal analysis estimated no difference (log odds per year 0.05, 95% Confidence Interval -0.17 to 0.27) between the rate of change of disability for those with one pre-injury comorbidity compared to those with none. Those with pre-injury multimorbidity had significantly slower reduction in disability over time than those with no pre-injury comorbidity (log odds per year 0.27, 95% Confidence Interval 0.05 to 0.48). In a working age cohort, the rate of recovery in the 24 months following injury was similar for those with none or one pre-existing comorbidity and significantly slower for those with multimorbidity. It is important that further research explores mechanisms driving this, and that researchers and health providers identify and implement better supports for injured people with multimorbidity.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5821361?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gabrielle Davie
Ari Samaranayaka
Sarah Derrett
spellingShingle Gabrielle Davie
Ari Samaranayaka
Sarah Derrett
The role of pre-existing comorbidity on the rate of recovery following injury: A longitudinal cohort study.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Gabrielle Davie
Ari Samaranayaka
Sarah Derrett
author_sort Gabrielle Davie
title The role of pre-existing comorbidity on the rate of recovery following injury: A longitudinal cohort study.
title_short The role of pre-existing comorbidity on the rate of recovery following injury: A longitudinal cohort study.
title_full The role of pre-existing comorbidity on the rate of recovery following injury: A longitudinal cohort study.
title_fullStr The role of pre-existing comorbidity on the rate of recovery following injury: A longitudinal cohort study.
title_full_unstemmed The role of pre-existing comorbidity on the rate of recovery following injury: A longitudinal cohort study.
title_sort role of pre-existing comorbidity on the rate of recovery following injury: a longitudinal cohort study.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Understanding the role of comorbidity in recovery following injury is an important challenge given the increasing prevalence of multimorbidity (2 or more comorbidities) in many countries. The Prospective Outcomes of Injury Study recruited 2856 injured 18-64 year olds that had registered for entitlements with New Zealand's universal no-fault injury insurer. Recovery, or lack of, in this longitudinal cohort was measured using the World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule at 3, 12 and 24 months post-injury. Twenty-one pre-existing chronic conditions were used to identify comorbidity. To investigate whether rates of recovery differed by pre-injury comorbidity, the interaction between time and comorbidity was modelled using Generalised Estimating Equations. Of 1,862 participants with complete data, the distribution reporting none, one comorbidity, or multimorbidity pre-injury was 51%, 27%, and 21% respectively. Longitudinal analysis estimated no difference (log odds per year 0.05, 95% Confidence Interval -0.17 to 0.27) between the rate of change of disability for those with one pre-injury comorbidity compared to those with none. Those with pre-injury multimorbidity had significantly slower reduction in disability over time than those with no pre-injury comorbidity (log odds per year 0.27, 95% Confidence Interval 0.05 to 0.48). In a working age cohort, the rate of recovery in the 24 months following injury was similar for those with none or one pre-existing comorbidity and significantly slower for those with multimorbidity. It is important that further research explores mechanisms driving this, and that researchers and health providers identify and implement better supports for injured people with multimorbidity.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5821361?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT gabrielledavie theroleofpreexistingcomorbidityontherateofrecoveryfollowinginjuryalongitudinalcohortstudy
AT arisamaranayaka theroleofpreexistingcomorbidityontherateofrecoveryfollowinginjuryalongitudinalcohortstudy
AT sarahderrett theroleofpreexistingcomorbidityontherateofrecoveryfollowinginjuryalongitudinalcohortstudy
AT gabrielledavie roleofpreexistingcomorbidityontherateofrecoveryfollowinginjuryalongitudinalcohortstudy
AT arisamaranayaka roleofpreexistingcomorbidityontherateofrecoveryfollowinginjuryalongitudinalcohortstudy
AT sarahderrett roleofpreexistingcomorbidityontherateofrecoveryfollowinginjuryalongitudinalcohortstudy
_version_ 1724937796243685376