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Chronic pain in Australia: a prevalence study

Journal: Journal of Osteopathic Medicine Date: 2001/04, 4(1):Pages: 37, type of study: cross sectional study

Full text    (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1443846101800666)

Keywords:

Australia [151]
chronic pain [204]
cross sectional study [597]
prevalence [11]
abstract [165]

Abstract:

This study reports chronic pain prevalence in a randomly selected sample of the adult Australian population. Data were collected by Computer-Assisted Telephone Interview (CATI) using randomly generated telephone numbers and a two-stage stratified sample design. Chronic pain was defined as pain experienced every day for three months in the six months prior to interview. There were 17,543 completed interviews (response rate--70.8%). Chronic pain was reported by 17.1% of males and 20.0% of females. For males, prevalence peaked at 27.0% in the 65-69 year age group and for females, prevalence peaked at 31.0% in the oldest age group (80-84 years). Having chronic pain was significantly associated with older age, female gender, lower levels of completed education, and not having private health insurance; it was also strongly associated with receiving a disability benefit (adjusted OR--3.89, P<0.001) or unemployment benefit (adjusted OR= 1.99, P<0.001); being unemployed for health reasons (adjusted OR--6.41, P<0.001); having poor self-rated health (adjusted OR--7.24, P<0.001); and high levels of psychological distress (adjusted OR--3.16, P<0.001). Eleven per cent of males and 13.5% of females in the survey reported some degree of interference with daily activities caused by their pain. Prevalence of interference was highest in the 55-59 year age group in both males (17.2%) and females (19.7%). Younger respondents with chronic pain were proportionately most likely to report interference due to pain, affecting 84.3% of females and 75.9% of males aged 20-24 years with chronic pain. Within the subgroup of respondents reporting chronic pain, the presence of interference with daily activities caused by pain was significantly associated with younger age; female gender; and not having private health insurance. There were strong associations between having interfering chronic pain and receiving disability benefits (adjusted OR--3.31, P<0.001) or being unemployed due to health reasons (adjusted OR=7.94, P<0.001, respectively). The results show that chronic pain impacts upon a large proportion of the adult Australian population, including the working age population, and is strongly associated with markers of social disadvantage.


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