Patterns of somatic diagnoses in older people with intellectual disabilities : A Swedish 11-year register-based study of inpatient data
(2016) 2016 IASSIDD World Congress In Journal of Intellectual Disability Research 60(7-8). p.692-692- Abstract
- Aim: To investigate patterns of somatic inpatient ICD-10 diagnoses in people with intellectual disabilities (ID) 55 years and older in relation to age over an 11-year period, and to compare these patterns with a general population sample. Method: The study was based on Swedish national registers. The ID group (n=7936) comprised people who were aged 55 or above in 2012. They were age- and sexmatched with people from the general population (n=7936). Data about somatic inpatient diagnoses were collected retrospectively for 2002-2012. Results: In several years, several diagnoses were more common in the ID group, particularly diseases in the nervous system (OR from 2.06 to 31.75), respiratory (OR from 1.78 to 4.08) and genitourinary diseases... (More)
- Aim: To investigate patterns of somatic inpatient ICD-10 diagnoses in people with intellectual disabilities (ID) 55 years and older in relation to age over an 11-year period, and to compare these patterns with a general population sample. Method: The study was based on Swedish national registers. The ID group (n=7936) comprised people who were aged 55 or above in 2012. They were age- and sexmatched with people from the general population (n=7936). Data about somatic inpatient diagnoses were collected retrospectively for 2002-2012. Results: In several years, several diagnoses were more common in the ID group, particularly diseases in the nervous system (OR from 2.06 to 31.75), respiratory (OR from 1.78 to 4.08) and genitourinary diseases (OR from 1.59 to 11.50), infections (OR from 1.78 to 4.08) and external causes of morbidity (OR from 1.53 to 4.08). The oldest persons (70+ years) in the ID group had less occurrence of cardiovascular (OR from 0.42 to 0.72), musculoskeletal diseases (OR from 0.32 to 0.53) and tumours (OR from 0.26 to 0.51). Conclusions: Older people with ID are less likely to have some diagnoses but more likely to have others. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/56b79a6c-55e9-4e61-9d77-4303918247e2
- author
- Kristensson, J. LU ; Ahlström, G. LU and Sandberg, M. LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2016-07-01
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- adult, cardiovascular system, diagnosis, hospital patient, human, ICD-10, infection, intellectual impairment, major clinical study, morbidity, musculoskeletal disease, neoplasm, neurologic disease, population, urogenital tract disease
- in
- Journal of Intellectual Disability Research
- volume
- 60
- issue
- 7-8
- pages
- 1 pages
- publisher
- Wiley-Blackwell
- conference name
- 2016 IASSIDD World Congress
- conference location
- Melbourne, Australia
- conference dates
- 2016-08-14 - 2016-08-19
- ISSN
- 0964-2633
- DOI
- 10.1111/jir.12305
- project
- Ageing persons with intellectual disability, health and mortality, healthcare utilization and social welfare: a Swedish national longitudinal population study
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 56b79a6c-55e9-4e61-9d77-4303918247e2
- date added to LUP
- 2016-08-25 14:38:19
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:25:28
@misc{56b79a6c-55e9-4e61-9d77-4303918247e2, abstract = {{Aim: To investigate patterns of somatic inpatient ICD-10 diagnoses in people with intellectual disabilities (ID) 55 years and older in relation to age over an 11-year period, and to compare these patterns with a general population sample. Method: The study was based on Swedish national registers. The ID group (n=7936) comprised people who were aged 55 or above in 2012. They were age- and sexmatched with people from the general population (n=7936). Data about somatic inpatient diagnoses were collected retrospectively for 2002-2012. Results: In several years, several diagnoses were more common in the ID group, particularly diseases in the nervous system (OR from 2.06 to 31.75), respiratory (OR from 1.78 to 4.08) and genitourinary diseases (OR from 1.59 to 11.50), infections (OR from 1.78 to 4.08) and external causes of morbidity (OR from 1.53 to 4.08). The oldest persons (70+ years) in the ID group had less occurrence of cardiovascular (OR from 0.42 to 0.72), musculoskeletal diseases (OR from 0.32 to 0.53) and tumours (OR from 0.26 to 0.51). Conclusions: Older people with ID are less likely to have some diagnoses but more likely to have others.}}, author = {{Kristensson, J. and Ahlström, G. and Sandberg, M.}}, issn = {{0964-2633}}, keywords = {{adult; cardiovascular system; diagnosis; hospital patient; human; ICD-10; infection; intellectual impairment; major clinical study; morbidity; musculoskeletal disease; neoplasm; neurologic disease; population; urogenital tract disease}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{07}}, note = {{Conference Abstract}}, number = {{7-8}}, pages = {{692--692}}, publisher = {{Wiley-Blackwell}}, series = {{Journal of Intellectual Disability Research}}, title = {{Patterns of somatic diagnoses in older people with intellectual disabilities : A Swedish 11-year register-based study of inpatient data}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jir.12305}}, doi = {{10.1111/jir.12305}}, volume = {{60}}, year = {{2016}}, }