TY - JOUR
T1 - Building ADMISSION
T2 - a research collaborative to transform understanding of multiple long-term conditions for people admitted to hospital
AU - Witham, Miles D.
AU - Bartle, Victoria
AU - Bellass, Sue
AU - Bunn, Jonathan G
AU - Cartner, Duncan
AU - Cordell, Heather J.
AU - Doal, Rominique
AU - Evison, Felicity
AU - Gallier, Suzy
AU - Harris, Steve
AU - Hillman, Susan J
AU - Holding, Ray
AU - Leroux, Peta
AU - Marshall, Tom
AU - Matthews, Fiona E
AU - Missier, Paolo
AU - Thakarakkattil Narayanan Nair, Anand
AU - Osman, Mo
AU - Pearson, Ewan
AU - Plummer, Chris
AU - Pretorius, Sara
AU - Richardson, Sarah J.
AU - Robinson, Sian M.
AU - Sapey, Elizabeth
AU - Scharf, Thomas
AU - Shah, Rupal
AU - Shahmandi, Marzieh
AU - Singer, Mervyn
AU - Suklan, Jana
AU - Wason, James M.S.
AU - Cooper, Rachel
AU - Sayer, Avan Aihie
PY - 2025/2/1
Y1 - 2025/2/1
N2 - Multiple long-term conditions (MLTCs; commonly referred to as multimorbidity) are highly prevalent among people admitted to hospital and are therefore of critical importance to hospital-based healthcare systems. To date, most research on MLTCs has been conducted in primary care or the general population with comparatively little work undertaken in the hospital setting. Here we describe the rationale and content of ADMISSION: a four-year UK Research and Innovation and National Institute of Health and Care Research funded interdisciplinary programme that seeks, in partnership with public contributors, to transform care for people living with MLTCs admitted to hospital. Based across five UK academic centres, ADMISSION combines expertise in clinical medicine, epidemiology, informatics, computing, biostatistics, social science, genetics and care pathway mapping to examine patterns of conditions, mechanisms, consequences and pathways of care for people with MLTCs admitted to hospital. The programme uses routinely collected electronic health record data from large UK teaching hospitals, population-based cohort data from UK Biobank and routinely collected blood samples from The Scottish Health Research Register and Biobank (SHARE). These approaches are complemented by focused qualitative work exploring the perspectives of healthcare professionals and the lived experience of people with MLTCs admitted to hospital. ADMISSION will provide the necessary foundations to develop novel ways to prevent and treat MLTCs and their consequences in people admitted to hospital and to improve care systems and the quality of care for this underserved group.
AB - Multiple long-term conditions (MLTCs; commonly referred to as multimorbidity) are highly prevalent among people admitted to hospital and are therefore of critical importance to hospital-based healthcare systems. To date, most research on MLTCs has been conducted in primary care or the general population with comparatively little work undertaken in the hospital setting. Here we describe the rationale and content of ADMISSION: a four-year UK Research and Innovation and National Institute of Health and Care Research funded interdisciplinary programme that seeks, in partnership with public contributors, to transform care for people living with MLTCs admitted to hospital. Based across five UK academic centres, ADMISSION combines expertise in clinical medicine, epidemiology, informatics, computing, biostatistics, social science, genetics and care pathway mapping to examine patterns of conditions, mechanisms, consequences and pathways of care for people with MLTCs admitted to hospital. The programme uses routinely collected electronic health record data from large UK teaching hospitals, population-based cohort data from UK Biobank and routinely collected blood samples from The Scottish Health Research Register and Biobank (SHARE). These approaches are complemented by focused qualitative work exploring the perspectives of healthcare professionals and the lived experience of people with MLTCs admitted to hospital. ADMISSION will provide the necessary foundations to develop novel ways to prevent and treat MLTCs and their consequences in people admitted to hospital and to improve care systems and the quality of care for this underserved group.
KW - Multiple Long-Term Conditions
KW - Multimorbidity
KW - Epidemiology
KW - Interdisciplinary
KW - Mechanisms
KW - Hospitalisation
U2 - 10.1177/26335565251317940
DO - 10.1177/26335565251317940
M3 - Article
C2 - 39896928
SN - 2633-5565
VL - 15
JO - The Journal of Multimorbidity and Comorbidity
JF - The Journal of Multimorbidity and Comorbidity
ER -