Investigating Health Outcomes Defined by Multiple Chronic Conditions
Abstract
Multiple chronic conditions (MCCs) have attracted significant public policy and clinical attention. Whether MCCs determine other important outcomes, or are themselves the outcomes of health-producing activities or interventions, metrics based thereon have potential to be useful indicators of the health of populations and of differences between and among the health of subpopulations. While the attention MCCs are attracting in various policy circles is impressive, MCCs' potential roles as indicators of population health and of how health determinants influence population–health outcomes have received less attention. The purpose of this chapter is to direct attention towards questions that involve considerations of chronic condition (CC) patterns as health outcomes; specifically, this paper hopes to advance the consideration of patterns of MCCs as indicators of individual and population health. Using data from the United States (US) Behavioural Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), the chapter explores whether both the ‘intensity’ (i.e. the number or count) of CCs as well as their ‘composition’ (i.e. the patterns of particular CCs) might be jointly of interest when considering the prevalence of MCCs in populations and how the nature of MCCs may vary across subpopulations of interest. It is seen that information about intensity tells an incomplete story about MCC health outcomes.
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Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements
Thanks are owed to participants in the UW-Madison Health Economics Workgroup and in the fourth Italian Health Econometrics Workshop in Padova and to an anonymous referee for helpful comments and suggestions. Partial financial support by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Evidence for Action Research Program (Grant No. 73336) is gratefully acknowledged.
Citation
Mullahy, J. (2024), "Investigating Health Outcomes Defined by Multiple Chronic Conditions", Baltagi, B.H. and Moscone, F. (Ed.) Recent Developments in Health Econometrics (Contributions to Economic Analysis, Vol. 297), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 255-270. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0573-855520240000297013
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2024 John Mullahy. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited