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Chronic musculoskeletal pain rarely presents in a single body site: results from a UK population study

Chronic musculoskeletal pain rarely presents in a single body site: results from a UK population study
Chronic musculoskeletal pain rarely presents in a single body site: results from a UK population study
Objective: To investigate the frequency and health impact of chronic multi-site musculoskeletal pain, in a representative UK sample.
Method: Population postal questionnaire survey, using 16 general practices in the southeast of England, nationally representative urban/rural, ethnic and socioeconomic mix. A random selection of 4049 registered patients, aged 18 or over, were sent a questionnaire. The main outcome measures were chronic pain location, identified using a pain drawing; distress, pain intensity and disability as measured by the GHQ12 and the Chronic Pain Grade.
Results: A total of 2445 patients (60%) responded to the survey (44% male, mean age 52yrs); 45% had chronic musculoskeletal pain. Of those with chronic pain, three quarters had pain in multiple sites (two or more sites). Variables significantly predicting this were: age under 55, [odds ratio (OR) 0.5, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.4, 0.6]; psychological distress (OR 1.8, Cl at 95% 1.4, 2.2) and high pain intensity (OR 5.2, Cl at 95% 4.1, 6.7). Only 33% of multi-site pain distributions conformed to the American College of Rheumatology definition of chronic widespread pain.
Conclusions: Multi-site chronic pain is more common than single-site chronic pain and is commonly associated with other problems. Indiscriminate targeting of research and care for chronic musculoskeletal pain on single sites may often be inappropriate.
chronic, multi-site, musculoskeletal, pain, community survey, prevalence, treatment, planning, BACK-PAIN, COMMUNITY
1462-0324
1168-1170
Carnes, Dawn
bd9800b7-b0aa-46f0-b7f0-bcff5f8f0326
Parsons, S.
4b65648f-7530-43df-a606-7cfac750e046
Ashby, D.
12a12757-6283-4323-a4b8-7f32b475847b
Breen, A.
5c40b654-4662-4342-9936-413a0550e7f5
Foster, N. E.
c50f2287-ea4d-4adc-93a1-e43b6994fb43
Pincus, Tamar
55388347-5d71-4fc0-9fd2-66fbba080e0c
Vogel, S.
a3a662e8-8a9e-4975-8aff-2a5ea1c70627
Underwood, M.
fd6ecc78-fe21-4e2e-a916-4d9270cf7c97
Carnes, Dawn
bd9800b7-b0aa-46f0-b7f0-bcff5f8f0326
Parsons, S.
4b65648f-7530-43df-a606-7cfac750e046
Ashby, D.
12a12757-6283-4323-a4b8-7f32b475847b
Breen, A.
5c40b654-4662-4342-9936-413a0550e7f5
Foster, N. E.
c50f2287-ea4d-4adc-93a1-e43b6994fb43
Pincus, Tamar
55388347-5d71-4fc0-9fd2-66fbba080e0c
Vogel, S.
a3a662e8-8a9e-4975-8aff-2a5ea1c70627
Underwood, M.
fd6ecc78-fe21-4e2e-a916-4d9270cf7c97

Carnes, Dawn, Parsons, S., Ashby, D., Breen, A., Foster, N. E., Pincus, Tamar, Vogel, S. and Underwood, M. (2007) Chronic musculoskeletal pain rarely presents in a single body site: results from a UK population study. Rheumatology, 46 (7), 1168-1170. (doi:10.1093/rheumatology/kem118).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: To investigate the frequency and health impact of chronic multi-site musculoskeletal pain, in a representative UK sample.
Method: Population postal questionnaire survey, using 16 general practices in the southeast of England, nationally representative urban/rural, ethnic and socioeconomic mix. A random selection of 4049 registered patients, aged 18 or over, were sent a questionnaire. The main outcome measures were chronic pain location, identified using a pain drawing; distress, pain intensity and disability as measured by the GHQ12 and the Chronic Pain Grade.
Results: A total of 2445 patients (60%) responded to the survey (44% male, mean age 52yrs); 45% had chronic musculoskeletal pain. Of those with chronic pain, three quarters had pain in multiple sites (two or more sites). Variables significantly predicting this were: age under 55, [odds ratio (OR) 0.5, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.4, 0.6]; psychological distress (OR 1.8, Cl at 95% 1.4, 2.2) and high pain intensity (OR 5.2, Cl at 95% 4.1, 6.7). Only 33% of multi-site pain distributions conformed to the American College of Rheumatology definition of chronic widespread pain.
Conclusions: Multi-site chronic pain is more common than single-site chronic pain and is commonly associated with other problems. Indiscriminate targeting of research and care for chronic musculoskeletal pain on single sites may often be inappropriate.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 27 March 2007
Published date: 1 July 2007
Keywords: chronic, multi-site, musculoskeletal, pain, community survey, prevalence, treatment, planning, BACK-PAIN, COMMUNITY

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 469151
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/469151
ISSN: 1462-0324
PURE UUID: 4e129498-518d-4fbf-b272-f61c655aa423
ORCID for S. Parsons: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2713-6448
ORCID for Tamar Pincus: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3172-5624

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Date deposited: 07 Sep 2022 17:43
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:11

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Contributors

Author: Dawn Carnes
Author: S. Parsons ORCID iD
Author: D. Ashby
Author: A. Breen
Author: N. E. Foster
Author: Tamar Pincus ORCID iD
Author: S. Vogel
Author: M. Underwood

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