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Chronic widespread pain predicts physical inactivity: results from the prospective EPIFUND study

Chronic widespread pain predicts physical inactivity: results from the prospective EPIFUND study
Chronic widespread pain predicts physical inactivity: results from the prospective EPIFUND study
This study tested the hypothesis that chronic widespread pain (CWP) would predict low levels of physical activity (PA). Pain status and PA levels were ascertained at baseline and 32 months in community subjects. Three PA questions were used: “in comparison with others your own age, is your PA “the same” (referent), “more-much more” or “less-much less””, and “during the past month on average how many days/week have you taken exercise that has (i) lasted at least 20 min? and (ii) made you sweat?: “4–7” (referent), “1–3” or “none””. Multinomial logistic regression models quantified the relationship between baseline CWP and PA at follow-up (relative risk ratios (RRR) (95% confidence intervals)). Two thousands one hundred and eighty-two subjects participated and provided complete pain and PA information at both timepoints. CWP was reported by 18% (n = 429) of participants at baseline. Compared to subjects who were free of CWP at baseline, those with CWP had an increased odds of reporting “less-much less” PA at follow-up (RRR = 4.5 (3.2–6.2)). This relationship remained after adjustment for confounders (RRR = 1.9 (1.3–2.9)). A similar association was observed with exercise that lasted at least 20 min (RRR = 1.9 (1.3–2.8)). The current study suggests that low self-reported levels of physical activity are a consequence of having CWP.
1532-2149
972-979
McBeth, John
98012716-66ba-480b-9e43-ac53b51dce61
Nicholl, Barbara I.
3922cf66-6e36-44d2-9d8b-1736123e0e53
Cordingley, Lis
83da6442-d5d6-43fc-b950-59957900a4b5
Davies, Kelly A.
29c14361-bc67-4ba4-9d6a-5c479fd495ba
MacFarlane, Gary J.
e17bbdb7-9d82-42ac-8a0a-09bf10885e3c
McBeth, John
98012716-66ba-480b-9e43-ac53b51dce61
Nicholl, Barbara I.
3922cf66-6e36-44d2-9d8b-1736123e0e53
Cordingley, Lis
83da6442-d5d6-43fc-b950-59957900a4b5
Davies, Kelly A.
29c14361-bc67-4ba4-9d6a-5c479fd495ba
MacFarlane, Gary J.
e17bbdb7-9d82-42ac-8a0a-09bf10885e3c

McBeth, John, Nicholl, Barbara I., Cordingley, Lis, Davies, Kelly A. and MacFarlane, Gary J. (2010) Chronic widespread pain predicts physical inactivity: results from the prospective EPIFUND study. European journal of pain, 14, 972-979. (doi:10.1016/j.ejpain.2010.03.005).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This study tested the hypothesis that chronic widespread pain (CWP) would predict low levels of physical activity (PA). Pain status and PA levels were ascertained at baseline and 32 months in community subjects. Three PA questions were used: “in comparison with others your own age, is your PA “the same” (referent), “more-much more” or “less-much less””, and “during the past month on average how many days/week have you taken exercise that has (i) lasted at least 20 min? and (ii) made you sweat?: “4–7” (referent), “1–3” or “none””. Multinomial logistic regression models quantified the relationship between baseline CWP and PA at follow-up (relative risk ratios (RRR) (95% confidence intervals)). Two thousands one hundred and eighty-two subjects participated and provided complete pain and PA information at both timepoints. CWP was reported by 18% (n = 429) of participants at baseline. Compared to subjects who were free of CWP at baseline, those with CWP had an increased odds of reporting “less-much less” PA at follow-up (RRR = 4.5 (3.2–6.2)). This relationship remained after adjustment for confounders (RRR = 1.9 (1.3–2.9)). A similar association was observed with exercise that lasted at least 20 min (RRR = 1.9 (1.3–2.8)). The current study suggests that low self-reported levels of physical activity are a consequence of having CWP.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 8 March 2010
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 April 2010
Published date: 2010

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 491503
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491503
ISSN: 1532-2149
PURE UUID: eb201f9f-1d53-40f3-ad0d-cd9215646320
ORCID for John McBeth: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7047-2183

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Date deposited: 25 Jun 2024 16:45
Last modified: 26 Jun 2024 02:11

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Contributors

Author: John McBeth ORCID iD
Author: Barbara I. Nicholl
Author: Lis Cordingley
Author: Kelly A. Davies
Author: Gary J. MacFarlane

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