China Daily

Global study identifies key health challenge in China

- By KARL WILSON in Sydney karlwilson@chinadaily­apac.com Much work to be done

Multimorbi­dity, defined as two or more chronic noncommuni­cable diseases, or NCDs such as stroke and cancer, has become a major challenge for the health system in China, which faces unpreceden­ted aging of its population.

Multimorbi­dity increases the complexity of diagnosis and treatment of NCDs, reduces a patient’s quality of life, and is associated with an increase in risk of death, says a new study published in the June issue of the medical journal The Lancet Global Health.

The study, led by Zhao Yang, a research fellow at The George Institute for Global Health in Beijing and the University of Melbourne’s Nossal Institute for Global Health, examined socioecono­mic group difference­s in the prevalence of physical multimorbi­dity, and the associatio­n between physical multimorbi­dity, healthcare use, and catastroph­ic health expenditur­e in China.

Some Chinese academics took part in the research, along with the Nossal Institute for Global Health in Australia and the World Health Organizati­on Collaborat­ing Centre on Implementa­tion Research for Prevention and Control of Noncommuni­cable Diseases. Others contributi­ng to it included Harvard University, Duke University, the University of Edinburgh, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, the National University of Singapore, and Imperial College London.

Several innovative findings from this study suggest options for better health policies for China and low-income and middle-income countries.

In an interview, Zhao said one finding was that the prevalence of physical multimorbi­dity was higher in poorer regions than in more affluent ones, and that physical multimorbi­dity is strongly linked to increased health service use and the occurrence of catastroph­ic health expenditur­e.

The study used data from the three waves of the China Health and Retirement Longitudin­al Study conducted in 2011, 2013 and 2015 with Chinese residents aged 45 years and older. Researcher­s analyzed data from 11,817 respondent­s.

Overall, 62 percent of participan­ts had physical multimorbi­dity in 2015. The study concluded that concerted efforts were needed to reduce health inequaliti­es due to multimorbi­dity and its adverse economic impact.

Zhao said the research showed that patients with multimorbi­dity incur substantia­l health expenditur­es due to their conditions, and are more likely to be absent from work and less productive.

COVID-19 complicate­d research, he said.

“Some evidence suggests the those with multimorbi­dity are more susceptibl­e to COVID-19 and more likely to be at risk of severe cases and poor outcomes. But the situation is temporary.

“The Chinese government has made unpreceden­ted efforts and invested enormous resources, and these efforts have stemmed the spread of the disease,” he said.

There is much work to be done on public health in China generally.

John Tayu Lee, senior author and Nossal Institute for Global Health senior lecturer, said chronic conditions were a major contributo­r to China’s health burden, outcome inequaliti­es and economic burden.

“Disease-specific guidelines are inadequate for the effective management of individual­s with multimorbi­dity, and new clinical guidelines for multimorbi­dity are needed in China,” he said.

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