Home
Scholarly Works
Cohort Profile: Multimorbidity in Children and...
Journal article

Cohort Profile: Multimorbidity in Children and Youth Across the Life-course (MY LIFE) Study.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This manuscript serves to provide an overview of the methods of the Multimorbidity in Children and Youth across the Life-course (MY LIFE) study, profile sample characteristics of the cohort, and provide baseline estimates of multimorbidity to foster collaboration with clinical and research colleagues across Canada. METHOD: MY LIFE is comprised of 263 children (2-16 years) with a physical illness recruited from McMaster Children's Hospital, their primary caregiving parent, and their closest-aged sibling. Participants are followed with data collection at recruitment, 6, 12, and 24 months which includes structured interviews, self-reported measures, and biological samples and occur in a private research office or at participants' homes. Post-COVID-19, data collection transitioned to mail and telephone surveys. RESULTS: At recruitment, children were 9.4 (4.2) years of age and 52.7% were male. The mean duration of their physical illness was 4.5 (4.1) years; 25% represent incident cases (duration <1 year). Most (69.7%) had healthy body weight and intelligence in the average range (73.5%). Overall, 38.2% of children screened positive for ≥1 mental illness according to parent report (24.8% screened positive based on child self-report). Compared to 2016 Census data, the MY LIFE cohort overrepresents families of higher socioeconomic status. CONCLUSIONS: Multimorbidity is common among children and these baseline data will serve to measure relative changes in the mental health of children with physical illness over time. MY LIFE will provide new information for understanding multimorbidity among children, though underrepresentation of lower socioeconomic families may have implications for the generalizability of findings.

Authors

Ferro MA; Lipman EL; Van Lieshout RJ; Timmons B; Shanahan L; Gorter JW; Georgiades K; Boyle M

Journal

Journal de l'Académie canadienne de psychiatrie de l'enfant et de l'adolescent, Vol. 30, No. 2, pp. 104–115

Publication Date

January 1, 2021

ISSN

1719-8429

Labels

Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

McMaster Research Centers and Institutes (RCI)

Contact the Experts team