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Multimorbidity-associated emergency hospital admissions: a "screen and link" strategy to improve outcomes for high-risk patients in sub-Saharan Africa: a prospective multicentre cohort study protocol.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Spencer, SA; Rutta, A; Hyuha, G; Banda, GT; Choko, A; Dark, P; Hertz, JT; Mmbaga, BT; Mfinanga, J; Mijumbi, R; Muula, A; Nyirenda, M; Rosu, L ...
Published in: NIHR open research
January 2024

The prevalence of multimorbidity (the presence of two or more chronic health conditions) is rapidly increasing in sub-Saharan Africa. Hospital care pathways that focus on single presenting complaints do not address this pressing problem. This has the potential to precipitate frequent hospital readmissions, increase health system and out-of-pocket expenses, and may lead to premature disability and death. We aim to present a description of inpatient multimorbidity in a multicentre prospective cohort study in Malawi and Tanzania.Clinical: Determine prevalence of multimorbid disease among adult medical admissions and measure patient outcomes. Health Economic: Measure economic costs incurred and changes in health-related quality of life (HRQoL) at 90 days post-admission. Situation analysis: Qualitatively describe pathways of patients with multimorbidity through the health system.Clinical: Determine hospital readmission free survival and markers of disease control 90 days after admission. Health Economic: Present economic costs from patient and health system perspective, sub-analyse costs and HRQoL according to presence of different diseases. Situation analysis: Understand health literacy related to their own diseases and experience of care for patients with multimorbidity and their caregivers.This is a prospective longitudinal cohort study of adult (≥18 years) acute medical hospital admissions with nested health economic and situation analysis in four hospitals: 1) Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, Blantyre, Malawi; 2) Chiradzulu District Hospital, Malawi; 3) Hai District Hospital, Boma Ng'ombe, Tanzania; 4) Muhimbili National Hospital, Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania. Follow-up duration will be 90 days from hospital admission. We will use consecutive recruitment within 24 hours of emergency presentation and stratified recruitment across four sites. We will use point-of-care tests to refine estimates of disease pathology. We will conduct qualitative interviews with patients, caregivers, healthcare providers and policymakers; focus group discussions with patients and caregivers, and observations of hospital care pathways.

Published In

NIHR open research

DOI

EISSN

2633-4402

ISSN

2633-4402

Publication Date

January 2024

Volume

4

Start / End Page

2
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Spencer, S. A., Rutta, A., Hyuha, G., Banda, G. T., Choko, A., Dark, P., … MultiLink Consortium. (2024). Multimorbidity-associated emergency hospital admissions: a "screen and link" strategy to improve outcomes for high-risk patients in sub-Saharan Africa: a prospective multicentre cohort study protocol. NIHR Open Research, 4, 2. https://doi.org/10.3310/nihropenres.13512.1
Spencer, Stephen A., Alice Rutta, Gimbo Hyuha, Gift Treighcy Banda, Augustine Choko, Paul Dark, Julian T. Hertz, et al. “Multimorbidity-associated emergency hospital admissions: a "screen and link" strategy to improve outcomes for high-risk patients in sub-Saharan Africa: a prospective multicentre cohort study protocol.NIHR Open Research 4 (January 2024): 2. https://doi.org/10.3310/nihropenres.13512.1.
Spencer SA, Rutta A, Hyuha G, Banda GT, Choko A, Dark P, Hertz JT, Mmbaga BT, Mfinanga J, Mijumbi R, Muula A, Nyirenda M, Rosu L, Rubach M, Salimu S, Sakita F, Salima C, Sawe H, Simiyu I, Taegtmeyer M, Urasa S, White S, Yongolo NM, Rylance J, Morton B, Worrall E, Limbani F, MultiLink Consortium. Multimorbidity-associated emergency hospital admissions: a "screen and link" strategy to improve outcomes for high-risk patients in sub-Saharan Africa: a prospective multicentre cohort study protocol. NIHR open research. 2024 Jan;4:2.

Published In

NIHR open research

DOI

EISSN

2633-4402

ISSN

2633-4402

Publication Date

January 2024

Volume

4

Start / End Page

2