The WHF Roadmap provides a structured framework for implementing integrated, person-centred care models to address the complex syndemic burden of cardiovascular disease and multiple long-term conditions.
Does integrated care improve clinical outcomes and reduce hospitalisations in people living with or at risk of CVD and MLTC?
Integrated, person-centred care models are essential to address the growing global syndemic of cardiovascular disease and multiple long-term conditions, improving outcomes and reducing health system strain.
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) commonly coexists with multiple long-term conditions (MLTC), including diabetes, chronic kidney disease, obesity, and mental health disorders. This clustering creates a syndemic burden associated with poorer outcomes, polypharmacy, high treatment burden, and rising healthcare costs. Fragmented, single-disease care models are ill-suited to address this complexity. The WHF roadmap for integrated care in people living with – or at risk of – CVD and MLTC provides a structured framework to support the design, implementation, and scale-up of person-centred, coordinated care models globally. Drawing on current evidence, expert consensus, case studies, and stakeholder surveys, the Roadmap outlines the epidemiological and systemic challenges of MLTC and identifies practical strategies adaptable across high-, middle-, and low-income settings. This Roadmap emphasises multidisciplinary teamwork, aligned financing, digital health infrastructure, workforce development, patient partnership, and robust monitoring and evaluation. By shifting from siloed care to integrated, capacity-sensitive approaches, health systems can improve clinical outcomes, enhance quality of life, reduce avoidable hospitalisations, and build resilience in the face of growing multimorbidity.
Sperling et al. (Thu,) conducted a review in Cardiovascular Disease and Multiple Long-Term Conditions. Integrated care models vs. Fragmented, single-disease care models was evaluated. The WHF Roadmap provides a structured framework for implementing integrated, person-centred care models to address the complex syndemic burden of cardiovascular disease and multiple long-term conditions.