Prevalence of current and chronic pain and their influences upon work and healthcare-seeking: A population study
(2004) In Journal of Rheumatology 31(7). p.1399-1406- Abstract
- Objective. To investigate the prevalence of current and chronic pain and their relationship to pain intensity, sex, age, income, employment status, citizenship, marital status, urban residence, occupational activity, and healthcare-seeking based on a representative sample from a Swedish county. Methods. A cross-sectional survey using a postal questionnaire was sent to a representative sample (n = 9952) of the target population (284,073 people, age 18-74 yrs) in a county (Ostergotland) in southern Sweden. A questionnaire was mailed and followed by 2 postal reminders if necessary. Results. The participation rate was 76.7% (n = 7637); nonparticipants were on average younger, male, and earned less money. The overall point prevalence of pain... (More)
- Objective. To investigate the prevalence of current and chronic pain and their relationship to pain intensity, sex, age, income, employment status, citizenship, marital status, urban residence, occupational activity, and healthcare-seeking based on a representative sample from a Swedish county. Methods. A cross-sectional survey using a postal questionnaire was sent to a representative sample (n = 9952) of the target population (284,073 people, age 18-74 yrs) in a county (Ostergotland) in southern Sweden. A questionnaire was mailed and followed by 2 postal reminders if necessary. Results. The participation rate was 76.7% (n = 7637); nonparticipants were on average younger, male, and earned less money. The overall point prevalence of pain was 48.9%. The corresponding one-month period prevalence was 63.0%, and pain on several occasions during the previous 3 months was reported by 61.3% of participants. The prevalence of chronic pain (pain > 3 months) was 53.7%. Female sex, age, and sick leave/early retirement were generally of significant importance in the regressions of pain. No sex factor was found in the regressions of pain frequency and pain intensity. Chronic pain - especially frequent and intensive pain - showed clear associations with healthcare-seeking and occupational activity. Conclusion. High prevalence of current pain (48.9%) and chronic pain (53.7%) were found in this community-based study. Being female, older, and on sick leave or early retirement were generally of significant importance in the regressions of pain. Chronic pain showed clear associations with healthcare-seeking and occupational activity, indicating considerable socioeconomic costs. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/264274
- author
- Gerdle, B ; Björk, Jonas LU ; Henriksson, C and Bengtsson, A
- organization
- publishing date
- 2004
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- prevalence, pain, work, epidemiology, healthcare
- in
- Journal of Rheumatology
- volume
- 31
- issue
- 7
- pages
- 1399 - 1406
- publisher
- Journal of Rheumatology Publishing Company Limited
- external identifiers
-
- wos:000222481600028
- pmid:15229963
- scopus:3042770910
- ISSN
- 0315-162X
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- b0e8924e-4713-4c48-bd09-3cc00dfe4a96 (old id 264274)
- alternative location
- http://www.jrheum.com/~temp/subscribers/04/07/1399.html
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 12:30:13
- date last changed
- 2022-04-05 23:16:44
@article{b0e8924e-4713-4c48-bd09-3cc00dfe4a96, abstract = {{Objective. To investigate the prevalence of current and chronic pain and their relationship to pain intensity, sex, age, income, employment status, citizenship, marital status, urban residence, occupational activity, and healthcare-seeking based on a representative sample from a Swedish county. Methods. A cross-sectional survey using a postal questionnaire was sent to a representative sample (n = 9952) of the target population (284,073 people, age 18-74 yrs) in a county (Ostergotland) in southern Sweden. A questionnaire was mailed and followed by 2 postal reminders if necessary. Results. The participation rate was 76.7% (n = 7637); nonparticipants were on average younger, male, and earned less money. The overall point prevalence of pain was 48.9%. The corresponding one-month period prevalence was 63.0%, and pain on several occasions during the previous 3 months was reported by 61.3% of participants. The prevalence of chronic pain (pain > 3 months) was 53.7%. Female sex, age, and sick leave/early retirement were generally of significant importance in the regressions of pain. No sex factor was found in the regressions of pain frequency and pain intensity. Chronic pain - especially frequent and intensive pain - showed clear associations with healthcare-seeking and occupational activity. Conclusion. High prevalence of current pain (48.9%) and chronic pain (53.7%) were found in this community-based study. Being female, older, and on sick leave or early retirement were generally of significant importance in the regressions of pain. Chronic pain showed clear associations with healthcare-seeking and occupational activity, indicating considerable socioeconomic costs.}}, author = {{Gerdle, B and Björk, Jonas and Henriksson, C and Bengtsson, A}}, issn = {{0315-162X}}, keywords = {{prevalence; pain; work; epidemiology; healthcare}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{7}}, pages = {{1399--1406}}, publisher = {{Journal of Rheumatology Publishing Company Limited}}, series = {{Journal of Rheumatology}}, title = {{Prevalence of current and chronic pain and their influences upon work and healthcare-seeking: A population study}}, url = {{http://www.jrheum.com/~temp/subscribers/04/07/1399.html}}, volume = {{31}}, year = {{2004}}, }