Time trends in patients managed simultaneously in multiple hospital outpatient specialty clinics for chronic diseases: A register-based cross-sectional study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Time trends in patients managed simultaneously in multiple hospital outpatient specialty clinics for chronic diseases : A register-based cross-sectional study. / Wolff, Donna Lykke; Von Plessen, Christian; Waldorff, Frans Boch; Sørensen, Thomas Lund; Bogh, Søren Bie; Rubin, Katrine Hass; Mogensen, Christian Backer.

In: Journal of Comorbidity, Vol. 9, 2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Wolff, DL, Von Plessen, C, Waldorff, FB, Sørensen, TL, Bogh, SB, Rubin, KH & Mogensen, CB 2019, 'Time trends in patients managed simultaneously in multiple hospital outpatient specialty clinics for chronic diseases: A register-based cross-sectional study', Journal of Comorbidity, vol. 9. https://doi.org/10.1177/2235042X19831907

APA

Wolff, D. L., Von Plessen, C., Waldorff, F. B., Sørensen, T. L., Bogh, S. B., Rubin, K. H., & Mogensen, C. B. (2019). Time trends in patients managed simultaneously in multiple hospital outpatient specialty clinics for chronic diseases: A register-based cross-sectional study. Journal of Comorbidity, 9. https://doi.org/10.1177/2235042X19831907

Vancouver

Wolff DL, Von Plessen C, Waldorff FB, Sørensen TL, Bogh SB, Rubin KH et al. Time trends in patients managed simultaneously in multiple hospital outpatient specialty clinics for chronic diseases: A register-based cross-sectional study. Journal of Comorbidity. 2019;9. https://doi.org/10.1177/2235042X19831907

Author

Wolff, Donna Lykke ; Von Plessen, Christian ; Waldorff, Frans Boch ; Sørensen, Thomas Lund ; Bogh, Søren Bie ; Rubin, Katrine Hass ; Mogensen, Christian Backer. / Time trends in patients managed simultaneously in multiple hospital outpatient specialty clinics for chronic diseases : A register-based cross-sectional study. In: Journal of Comorbidity. 2019 ; Vol. 9.

Bibtex

@article{8c9ea38967154fb8964f8783fe33fd3a,
title = "Time trends in patients managed simultaneously in multiple hospital outpatient specialty clinics for chronic diseases: A register-based cross-sectional study",
abstract = "Background: The increasing prevalence of patients with multimorbidity in the general population affects the health-care system. There is a lack of knowledge of the proportion of patients attending multiple hospital outpatient specialty clinics simultaneously.Objective: This study describes the development in the proportion of patients managed simultaneously in multiple hospital outpatient specialty clinics.Design: We obtained three cross-sectional samples from all of the hospitals in Denmark. The data set consists of adults (age 18+) in long-term outpatient care on January 1 in 2004, 2009, and 2014 with one or more of 50 consensus-selected chronic diseases. Descriptive statistics were used to examine and compare the proportion of patients treated simultaneously in multiple outpatient specialty clinics. We also investigated the most common combinations of outpatient specialty clinics.Results: In 2004, 176,786 patients with chronic diseases were registered as receiving outpatient care in Denmark. This figure increased to 246,542 patients in 2009 and 341,015 in 2014. The proportion of patients managed simultaneously in multiple outpatient specialty clinics was 4.0% in 2004, 5.5% in 2009, and 7.7% in 2014. The most common specialty clinic combination was endocrinology and cardiology, accounting for 12.1% in 2004, 11.5% in 2009, and 9.6% in 2014.Conclusions: The proportion of patients in multiple clinics nearly doubled over a 10-year period. While there were some common specialty clinic combinations in which patients were treated most often, there was also considerable variation. Further studies are needed to identify generic and disease-specific initiatives.",
author = "Wolff, {Donna Lykke} and {Von Plessen}, Christian and Waldorff, {Frans Boch} and S{\o}rensen, {Thomas Lund} and Bogh, {S{\o}ren Bie} and Rubin, {Katrine Hass} and Mogensen, {Christian Backer}",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1177/2235042X19831907",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "Journal of Comorbidity",
issn = "2235-042X",
publisher = "Swiss Medical Press GmbH",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Time trends in patients managed simultaneously in multiple hospital outpatient specialty clinics for chronic diseases

T2 - A register-based cross-sectional study

AU - Wolff, Donna Lykke

AU - Von Plessen, Christian

AU - Waldorff, Frans Boch

AU - Sørensen, Thomas Lund

AU - Bogh, Søren Bie

AU - Rubin, Katrine Hass

AU - Mogensen, Christian Backer

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Background: The increasing prevalence of patients with multimorbidity in the general population affects the health-care system. There is a lack of knowledge of the proportion of patients attending multiple hospital outpatient specialty clinics simultaneously.Objective: This study describes the development in the proportion of patients managed simultaneously in multiple hospital outpatient specialty clinics.Design: We obtained three cross-sectional samples from all of the hospitals in Denmark. The data set consists of adults (age 18+) in long-term outpatient care on January 1 in 2004, 2009, and 2014 with one or more of 50 consensus-selected chronic diseases. Descriptive statistics were used to examine and compare the proportion of patients treated simultaneously in multiple outpatient specialty clinics. We also investigated the most common combinations of outpatient specialty clinics.Results: In 2004, 176,786 patients with chronic diseases were registered as receiving outpatient care in Denmark. This figure increased to 246,542 patients in 2009 and 341,015 in 2014. The proportion of patients managed simultaneously in multiple outpatient specialty clinics was 4.0% in 2004, 5.5% in 2009, and 7.7% in 2014. The most common specialty clinic combination was endocrinology and cardiology, accounting for 12.1% in 2004, 11.5% in 2009, and 9.6% in 2014.Conclusions: The proportion of patients in multiple clinics nearly doubled over a 10-year period. While there were some common specialty clinic combinations in which patients were treated most often, there was also considerable variation. Further studies are needed to identify generic and disease-specific initiatives.

AB - Background: The increasing prevalence of patients with multimorbidity in the general population affects the health-care system. There is a lack of knowledge of the proportion of patients attending multiple hospital outpatient specialty clinics simultaneously.Objective: This study describes the development in the proportion of patients managed simultaneously in multiple hospital outpatient specialty clinics.Design: We obtained three cross-sectional samples from all of the hospitals in Denmark. The data set consists of adults (age 18+) in long-term outpatient care on January 1 in 2004, 2009, and 2014 with one or more of 50 consensus-selected chronic diseases. Descriptive statistics were used to examine and compare the proportion of patients treated simultaneously in multiple outpatient specialty clinics. We also investigated the most common combinations of outpatient specialty clinics.Results: In 2004, 176,786 patients with chronic diseases were registered as receiving outpatient care in Denmark. This figure increased to 246,542 patients in 2009 and 341,015 in 2014. The proportion of patients managed simultaneously in multiple outpatient specialty clinics was 4.0% in 2004, 5.5% in 2009, and 7.7% in 2014. The most common specialty clinic combination was endocrinology and cardiology, accounting for 12.1% in 2004, 11.5% in 2009, and 9.6% in 2014.Conclusions: The proportion of patients in multiple clinics nearly doubled over a 10-year period. While there were some common specialty clinic combinations in which patients were treated most often, there was also considerable variation. Further studies are needed to identify generic and disease-specific initiatives.

U2 - 10.1177/2235042X19831907

DO - 10.1177/2235042X19831907

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30891430

VL - 9

JO - Journal of Comorbidity

JF - Journal of Comorbidity

SN - 2235-042X

ER -

ID: 258278524