Department of Psychology, University of Mississippi, Oxford, MS, USA.
Headache. 2011 Apr;51(4):581-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1526-4610.2011.01857.x.
Migraine is associated with significant negative impact, including reduced quality of life, impaired functioning, and comorbid psychiatric disorders. However, the impact of migraine on university students is understudied, despite their high prevalence of migraine and psychiatric disorders and their frequent use in research studies.
The aim of this cross-sectional study was to evaluate the impact of migraine among college students on quality of life, functional impairment, and comorbid psychiatric symptoms.
Three hundred and ninety-one students (76.73% female, mean age = 19.43 ± 2.80 years) completed well-validated measures of migraine and migraine-related disability, quality of life, and comorbid psychiatric symptoms. They also quantified impairment in school attendance and home functioning and reported the number of medical visits during the preceding 3 months.
One hundred and one (25.83%) met conservative screening criteria for episodic migraine; their mean score on the Migraine Disability Assessment Questionnaire was 9.98 ± 12.10. Compared to those not screening positive for migraine, the migraine-positive group reported reduced quality of life on 5 of 6 domains, as well as a higher frequency of missed school days (2.74 vs 1.36), impaired functioning at home (2.84 vs 1.21 days), and medical visits (1.86 vs 0.95). They also reported more symptoms of both depression and anxiety than controls, although differences in functional impairment remained after controlling for these comorbid psychiatric symptoms. These differences were highly statistically significant and corroborated by evidence of clinically significant impairment; the corresponding effect sizes were modest but non-trivial.
Episodic migraine is associated with negative impact in numerous domains among university students. These findings replicate and extend those of studies on other samples and have implications for future research studies with this population.
偏头痛与显著的负面影响相关,包括生活质量下降、功能受损和合并的精神障碍。然而,尽管大学生偏头痛和精神障碍的患病率较高,且他们经常被用于研究,但偏头痛对大学生的影响仍研究不足。
本横断面研究旨在评估偏头痛对大学生生活质量、功能障碍和合并精神症状的影响。
391 名学生(76.73%为女性,平均年龄=19.43±2.80 岁)完成了偏头痛和偏头痛相关残疾、生活质量和合并精神症状的经过充分验证的测量。他们还量化了学业缺勤和家庭功能障碍的程度,并报告了过去 3 个月内的就诊次数。
101 名(25.83%)符合发作性偏头痛的保守筛查标准;他们的偏头痛残疾评估问卷平均得分为 9.98±12.10。与未筛查出偏头痛的学生相比,偏头痛阳性组在 6 个领域中的 5 个领域报告生活质量下降,并且缺课天数(2.74 天 vs 1.36 天)、家庭功能障碍(2.84 天 vs 1.21 天)和就诊次数(1.86 天 vs 0.95 天)更多。他们也报告了更多的抑郁和焦虑症状,尽管在校正这些合并的精神症状后,功能障碍的差异仍然存在。这些差异具有高度统计学意义,并得到了临床上显著障碍的证据的支持;相应的效应大小适中但并非微不足道。
发作性偏头痛与大学生多个领域的负面影响相关。这些发现复制并扩展了其他样本的研究结果,对未来对该人群的研究具有重要意义。