Publication | Closed Access
An epidemiologic comparison of pain complaints
968
Citations
22
References
1988
Year
Pain TherapyAcute PainPain MedicineHealth PsychologyPain DiagnosisMental HealthFibromyalgiaSocial SciencesPain SyndromeClinical PsychologyPain ComplaintsPain ManagementPublic HealthBack PainCommon Pain ConditionsPsychiatryDepressionRehabilitationMusculoskeletal PainPain ResearchCancer PainPain ConditionsMedicinePsychopathology
The study examined the timing, intensity, treatment seeking, and activity limitation of common pain conditions. Researchers conducted a probability survey of adult enrollees in a Seattle health maintenance organization to assess pain and psychological distress. Among participants, 41% reported back pain, 26% headache, 17% abdominal, 12% chest, and 12% facial pain; pain was more frequent in women, less in older adults, generally chronic and mild‑to‑moderate, limited activities in 9–40% of cases, and correlated with higher anxiety, depression, somatization, poorer self‑rated health, and family stress, with somatization showing the strongest association.
A survey concerning common pain conditions and psychological distress was carried out among a probability sample of the adult enrollees of a large health maintenance organization in Seattle. The prevalence of pain in the prior six months was 41% for back pain; 26% for headache; 17% for abdominal pain; 12% for chest pain; and 12% for facial pain. Headache, abdominal and facial pain were less prevalent among older persons and more prevalent among females. We examined the temporal dimensions of these pain conditions, as well as intensity, treatment seeking, and activity limitation. The pain conditions were typically long standing, recurrent, of mild to moderate intensity, and usually did not limit activities. However, depending on the pain condition, 9-40% reported one or more days in the prior six months when they were unable to carry out their usual activities due to the pain problem. On average, persons with a pain condition had higher levels of anxiety, depression, and non-pain somatic symptoms as measured by the scales of the Symptom Checklist (SCL); poorer self-rating of health status; and more family stress compared to persons without a pain condition. Of these alternative measures of distress, the SCL somatization scale had the strongest independent association with pain. The increments in measures of anxiety, depression, and family stress with the presence of pain were greatest among persons with higher levels of non-pain somatic symptoms.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1