描述多种长期疾病多病性生命过程决定因素的概念框架。

Journal of multimorbidity and comorbidity Pub Date : 2023-09-03 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1177/26335565231193951
Sebastian Stannard, Ann Berrington, Shantini Paranjothy, Rhiannon Owen, Simon Fraser, Rebecca Hoyle, Michael Boniface, Becky Wilkinson, Ashley Akbari, Sophia Batchelor, William Jones, Mark Ashworth, Jack Welch, Frances S Mair, Nisreen A Alwan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的生命早期的社会、生物和环境因素(指从受孕前到 18 岁这段时间)在形成多种长期疾病多发风险方面发挥着作用。然而,我们需要将这些早期生活因素概念化,了解这些因素之间的关系,并为未来的多病症病因学研究和多病症预防方案建模提供概念框架。我们建立了一个概念框架,以描述未来多病症的早期生活决定因素在人群层面的特征:这项工作是 "多学科生态系统研究早期多病负担的生命过程决定因素和预防"(MELD-B)研究的一部分。通过对现有研究证据和政策的回顾,形成了多病症生命过程决定因素领域的概念,并通过两次研讨会与公众共同参与:早期生活风险因素包括个人、社会、经济、行为和环境因素,研究证据、政策以及公众参与讨论的关键领域包括不良童年经历、社会经济、社会和物理环境以及教育。与研究证据中讨论的更广泛的健康决定因素相比,政策建议更多关注的是个人层面的因素。在我们与公众贡献者的共同制作过程中,一些重点领域,如宗教和精神信仰、健康筛查和体检以及饮食等,在研究证据或政策中都没有得到充分考虑:这一共同生成的概念可以为研究方向提供信息,利用第一手和第二手数据来调查未来多病风险人群的早期生活特征,并为针对早发多病的公共卫生预防方案提供政策方向。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

A conceptual framework for characterising lifecourse determinants of multiple long-term condition multimorbidity.

A conceptual framework for characterising lifecourse determinants of multiple long-term condition multimorbidity.

A conceptual framework for characterising lifecourse determinants of multiple long-term condition multimorbidity.

A conceptual framework for characterising lifecourse determinants of multiple long-term condition multimorbidity.

Objective: Social, biological and environmental factors in early-life, defined as the period from preconception until age 18, play a role in shaping the risk of multiple long-term condition multimorbidity. However, there is a need to conceptualise these early-life factors, how they relate to each other, and provide conceptual framing for future research on aetiology and modelling prevention scenarios of multimorbidity. We develop a conceptual framework to characterise the population-level domains of early-life determinants of future multimorbidity.

Method: This work was conducted as part of the Multidisciplinary Ecosystem to study Lifecourse Determinants and Prevention of Early-onset Burdensome Multimorbidity (MELD-B) study. The conceptualisation of multimorbidity lifecourse determinant domains was shaped by a review of existing research evidence and policy, and co-produced with public involvement via two workshops.

Results: Early-life risk factors incorporate personal, social, economic, behavioural and environmental factors, and the key domains discussed in research evidence, policy, and with public contributors included adverse childhood experiences, socioeconomics, the social and physical environment, and education. Policy recommendations more often focused on individual-level factors as opposed to the wider determinants of health discussed within the research evidence. Some domains highlighted through our co-production process with public contributors, such as religion and spirituality, health screening and check-ups, and diet, were not adequately considered within the research evidence or policy.

Conclusions: This co-produced conceptualisation can inform research directions using primary and secondary data to investigate the early-life characteristics of population groups at risk of future multimorbidity, as well as policy directions to target public health prevention scenarios of early-onset multimorbidity.

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