Burden, determinants, consequences and care of multimorbidity in rural and urbanising Telangana, India: protocol for a mixed-methods study within the APCAPS cohort

Author:

Lieber JudithORCID,Banjara Santosh Kumar,Mallinson Poppy Alice CarsonORCID,Mahajan Hemant,Bhogadi Santhi,Addanki Srivalli,Birk Nick,Song WenboORCID,Shah Anoop SV,Kurmi Om,Iyer Gowri,Kamalakannan SureshkumarORCID,Kishore Galla Raghu,Sadanand Shilpa,Dasi Teena,Kulkarni BharatiORCID,Kinra Sanjay

Abstract

IntroductionThe epidemiological and demographic transitions are leading to a rising burden of multimorbidity (co-occurrence of two or more chronic conditions) worldwide. Evidence on the burden, determinants, consequences and care of multimorbidity in rural and urbanising India is limited, partly due to a lack of longitudinal and objectively measured data on chronic health conditions. We will conduct a mixed-methods study nested in the prospective Andhra Pradesh Children and Parents’ Study (APCAPS) cohort to develop a data resource for understanding the epidemiology of multimorbidity in rural and urbanising India and developing interventions to improve the prevention and care of multimorbidity.Methods and analysisWe aim to recruit 2100 APCAPS cohort members aged 45+ who have clinical and lifestyle data collected during a previous cohort follow-up (2010–2012). We will screen for locally prevalent non-communicable, infectious and mental health conditions, alongside cognitive impairments, disabilities and frailty, using a combination of self-reported clinical diagnosis, symptom-based questionnaires, physical examinations and biochemical assays. We will conduct in-depth interviews with people with varying multimorbidity clusters, their informal carers and local healthcare providers. Deidentified data will be made available to external researchers.Ethics and disseminationThe study has received approval from the ethics committees of the National Institute of Nutrition and Indian Institute of Public Health Hyderabad, India and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK. Meta-data and data collection instruments will be published on the APCAPS website alongside details of existing APCAPS data and the data access process (www.lshtm.ac.uk/research/centres-projects-groups/apcaps).

Funder

Nagasaki University

Medical Research Council

National Institute of Nutrition, Hyderabad, India

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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