Prevalence and comparative troublesomeness by age of musculoskeletal pain in different body locations
Prevalence and comparative troublesomeness by age of musculoskeletal pain in different body locations
Background. Chronic pain has large health care costs and a major impact on the health of those affected. Few studies have also considered the severity of pain in different parts of the body across all age groups.Objectives. To measure the prevalence and troublesomeness of musculoskeletal pain in different body locations and age groups, in a consistent manner, without using location specific health outcome measures.Methods. A cross-sectional postal survey of 4049 adults registered with 16 MRC General Practice Research Framework practices. Frequency of chronic pain overall and troublesome pain by location and age was calculated. Logistic regression was undertaken to explore the relationship between chronic pain and demographic factors.Results. We received 2504 replies; response rate 60%. The prevalence of chronic pain was 41%. The prevalence of chronic pain rose from 23% in 18-24 year Olds reaching a peak of 50% in 55-64 year Olds. Troublesome pain over the last 4 weeks was commonest in the lower back (25%), neck (18%), knee (17%) and shoulder (17%). Troublesome wrist, elbow, shoulder, neck and lower back pain were most prevalent in the 45- to 64-year-age groups. Troublesome hip/thigh, knee and ankle/foot pain were most prevalent in those aged 75 or more.Conclusions. Great efforts have been made to develop and test treatments for low back pain. Our findings suggest that the overall prevalence of troublesome neck, knee and shoulder pain approaches that of troublesome low back pain and that similar efforts may be required to improve the management these pains.
age, chronic pain, epidemiology, surveys, LOW-BACK-PAIN, OF-THE-LITERATURE, UNDERPRIVILEGED AREAS, GENERAL-POPULATION, COMMUNITY, CARE, DEFINITIONS, VALIDATION, SYMPTOMS, DISORDER
308-316
Parsons, S.
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Breen, A.
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Foster, N. E.
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Letley, L.
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Pincus, Tamar
55388347-5d71-4fc0-9fd2-66fbba080e0c
Vogel, S.
8dedb290-08ca-4926-9d75-8943ac1ff7ac
Underwood, M.
239a8609-e7b5-4acb-aaf9-9e7f717f0d62
September 2007
Parsons, S.
adfe24da-f3b4-4e86-833e-aec50ee801c9
Breen, A.
5c40b654-4662-4342-9936-413a0550e7f5
Foster, N. E.
2ca79c15-6ada-4b99-982c-f8abee19e628
Letley, L.
9ec0f4b0-d4d0-487b-b8bf-9f57902493fa
Pincus, Tamar
55388347-5d71-4fc0-9fd2-66fbba080e0c
Vogel, S.
8dedb290-08ca-4926-9d75-8943ac1ff7ac
Underwood, M.
239a8609-e7b5-4acb-aaf9-9e7f717f0d62
Parsons, S., Breen, A., Foster, N. E., Letley, L., Pincus, Tamar, Vogel, S. and Underwood, M.
(2007)
Prevalence and comparative troublesomeness by age of musculoskeletal pain in different body locations.
Family Practice, 24 (4), .
(doi:10.1093/fampra/cmm027).
Abstract
Background. Chronic pain has large health care costs and a major impact on the health of those affected. Few studies have also considered the severity of pain in different parts of the body across all age groups.Objectives. To measure the prevalence and troublesomeness of musculoskeletal pain in different body locations and age groups, in a consistent manner, without using location specific health outcome measures.Methods. A cross-sectional postal survey of 4049 adults registered with 16 MRC General Practice Research Framework practices. Frequency of chronic pain overall and troublesome pain by location and age was calculated. Logistic regression was undertaken to explore the relationship between chronic pain and demographic factors.Results. We received 2504 replies; response rate 60%. The prevalence of chronic pain was 41%. The prevalence of chronic pain rose from 23% in 18-24 year Olds reaching a peak of 50% in 55-64 year Olds. Troublesome pain over the last 4 weeks was commonest in the lower back (25%), neck (18%), knee (17%) and shoulder (17%). Troublesome wrist, elbow, shoulder, neck and lower back pain were most prevalent in the 45- to 64-year-age groups. Troublesome hip/thigh, knee and ankle/foot pain were most prevalent in those aged 75 or more.Conclusions. Great efforts have been made to develop and test treatments for low back pain. Our findings suggest that the overall prevalence of troublesome neck, knee and shoulder pain approaches that of troublesome low back pain and that similar efforts may be required to improve the management these pains.
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Published date: September 2007
Keywords:
age, chronic pain, epidemiology, surveys, LOW-BACK-PAIN, OF-THE-LITERATURE, UNDERPRIVILEGED AREAS, GENERAL-POPULATION, COMMUNITY, CARE, DEFINITIONS, VALIDATION, SYMPTOMS, DISORDER
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Local EPrints ID: 469385
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/469385
ISSN: 0263-2136
PURE UUID: caece994-2f80-457a-9930-06f988e8ca4b
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Date deposited: 14 Sep 2022 16:40
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:11
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Author:
S. Parsons
Author:
A. Breen
Author:
N. E. Foster
Author:
L. Letley
Author:
Tamar Pincus
Author:
S. Vogel
Author:
M. Underwood
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