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Sex-specific intergenerational trends in morbidity burden and multimorbidity status in Hong Kong community: an age-period-cohort analysis of repeated population surveys.

Francisco Tsz Tsun LaiBruce GuthrieSamuel Y S WongBenjamin H K YipGary K K ChungEng-Kiong YeohRoger Y Chung
Published in: BMJ open (2019)
The trend of lower risk starting from men born in 1945-1954 may be due to a persistent decline in smoking rates since the 1980s. On the other hand, the childhood obesity epidemic starting from the late 1950s coincided with the observed upward inflection of risk for both sexes, that is, notably more drastic increase of risk in women and the levelling-off of the decline of risk in men. These findings highlight that the cohort effects on morbidity burden and multimorbidity may be sex-specific and contextual. By examining such effects in different world populations, localised sex-specific and generation-specific risk factors can be identified to inform policy-making.
Keyphrases
  • risk factors
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • type diabetes
  • metabolic syndrome
  • skeletal muscle
  • adipose tissue
  • preterm birth