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Younger but sicker? Cohort trends in disease accumulation among middle-aged and older adults in Scotland using health-linked data from the Scottish Longitudinal Study

Younger but sicker? Cohort trends in disease accumulation among middle-aged and older adults in Scotland using health-linked data from the Scottish Longitudinal Study
Younger but sicker? Cohort trends in disease accumulation among middle-aged and older adults in Scotland using health-linked data from the Scottish Longitudinal Study
Background: in the United Kingdom, rising prevalence of multimorbidity—the co-occurrence of two or more chronic conditions- is coinciding with stagnation in life expectancy. We investigate patterns of disease accumulation and how they vary by birth cohort, social and environmental inequalities in Scotland, a country which has long suffered from excess mortality and poorer health outcomes relative to its neighbours.

Methods: using a dataset which links census data from 1991, 2001 and 2011 to disease registers and hospitalization data, we follow cohorts of adults aged 30–69 years for 18 years. We model physical and mental disease accumulation using linear mixed-effects models.

Results: recent cohorts experience higher levels of chronic disease accumulation compared to their predecessors at the same ages. Moreover, in more recently born cohorts we observe socioeconomic status disparities emerging earlier in the life course, which widen over time and with every successive cohort. Patterns of chronic conditions are also changing, and the most common diseases suffered by later born cohorts are cancer, hypertension, asthma, drug and alcohol problems and depression.

Conclusion: we recommend policies which target prevention of chronic disease in working age adults, considering how and why certain conditions are becoming more prevalent across time and space.
1101-1262
696-703
Ribe, Eloi
d31b8276-457e-4e4b-8359-f454e5a4777c
Cezard, Genevieve Isabelle
d241fd50-4dd1-4617-8369-151060fc445e
Marshall, Alan
66b9d684-6d44-47d9-ae80-9a4bcc6f5559
Keenan, Katherine
6f7b8a36-eef8-4b1c-a6d8-81abb5c687d0
Ribe, Eloi
d31b8276-457e-4e4b-8359-f454e5a4777c
Cezard, Genevieve Isabelle
d241fd50-4dd1-4617-8369-151060fc445e
Marshall, Alan
66b9d684-6d44-47d9-ae80-9a4bcc6f5559
Keenan, Katherine
6f7b8a36-eef8-4b1c-a6d8-81abb5c687d0

Ribe, Eloi, Cezard, Genevieve Isabelle, Marshall, Alan and Keenan, Katherine (2024) Younger but sicker? Cohort trends in disease accumulation among middle-aged and older adults in Scotland using health-linked data from the Scottish Longitudinal Study. European Journal of Public Health, 34 (4), 696-703, [ckae062]. (doi:10.1093/eurpub/ckae062).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: in the United Kingdom, rising prevalence of multimorbidity—the co-occurrence of two or more chronic conditions- is coinciding with stagnation in life expectancy. We investigate patterns of disease accumulation and how they vary by birth cohort, social and environmental inequalities in Scotland, a country which has long suffered from excess mortality and poorer health outcomes relative to its neighbours.

Methods: using a dataset which links census data from 1991, 2001 and 2011 to disease registers and hospitalization data, we follow cohorts of adults aged 30–69 years for 18 years. We model physical and mental disease accumulation using linear mixed-effects models.

Results: recent cohorts experience higher levels of chronic disease accumulation compared to their predecessors at the same ages. Moreover, in more recently born cohorts we observe socioeconomic status disparities emerging earlier in the life course, which widen over time and with every successive cohort. Patterns of chronic conditions are also changing, and the most common diseases suffered by later born cohorts are cancer, hypertension, asthma, drug and alcohol problems and depression.

Conclusion: we recommend policies which target prevention of chronic disease in working age adults, considering how and why certain conditions are becoming more prevalent across time and space.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 14 March 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 April 2024
Published date: 11 April 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Public Health Association.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489300
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489300
ISSN: 1101-1262
PURE UUID: 0d4dd24a-890c-4e66-875a-61c5ba3c729f
ORCID for Eloi Ribe: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7737-1983

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Date deposited: 19 Apr 2024 16:39
Last modified: 06 Nov 2024 03:10

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Contributors

Author: Eloi Ribe ORCID iD
Author: Genevieve Isabelle Cezard
Author: Alan Marshall
Author: Katherine Keenan

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