Increased Delayed Healthcare Among People with Depression and Multimorbidity: Analysis of the 2019-2023 NHIS data
Arum Lim, Chitchanok Benjasirisan, Soo Hyun Kim, Cheryl Himmelfarb, Patricia Davidson, Binu Koirala

TL;DR
People with depression and multiple chronic conditions are more likely to delay healthcare, especially younger adults, according to a U.S. health survey analysis.
Contribution
This study identifies depression as a significant factor in healthcare delays among people with multimorbidity, highlighting age-specific disparities.
Findings
Younger adults with depression had a 1.78 times higher prevalence of delayed healthcare compared to those without depression.
Older adults with depression had a 2.19 times higher prevalence of delayed healthcare compared to those without depression.
Healthcare delays were more common in younger adults (22.0%) than in older adults (7.6%).
Abstract
Depression is common among individuals living with multimorbidity, causing adverse health outcomes. Although timely healthcare access is crucial to this population due to the burden of illness and the complexity of care, it has not been studied extensively how depression hinders healthcare access. This study aimed to examine the prevalence of delayed healthcare and its association with depression and multimorbidity, stratified by age (18-64 vs. ≥65 years). A cross-sectional analysis was performed using 56,727 individuals’ data from the 2019-2023 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS). Multimorbidity was defined by a self-reported history of two or more physical chronic conditions (e.g., hypertension, diabetes, stroke, cancer), and a self-reported depression history was assessed additionally. Individuals who experienced delays in healthcare over the past 12 months for any reason,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChronic Disease Management Strategies · Primary Care and Health Outcomes · Interprofessional Education and Collaboration
