Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina; Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina; Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina; Center for Child Health, Behavior and Development, Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, Washington.
J Pain. 2024 May;25(5):104420. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2023.11.003. Epub 2023 Nov 10.
U.S. military veterans experience higher pain prevalence than nonveterans. However, it is unclear how the disparities in pain prevalence have changed over time because previous trend studies are limited to veterans using the Veterans Health Administration. This repeated cross-sectional study aimed to characterize pain prevalence trends in the overall population of U.S. veterans compared to nonveterans, using nationally representative data. We analyzed 17 years of data from the National Health Interview Survey (2002-2018), with a mean annual unweighted sample of 29,802 U.S. adults (total unweighted n = 506,639) and mean annual weighted population of 229.7 million noninstitutionalized adults. The weighted proportion of veterans ranged from 11.48% in 2002 (highest) to 8.41% in 2017 (lowest). We found that veterans experience a similar or higher prevalence of pain than nonveterans across the study period, except for severe headaches or migraine and facial pain. Pain prevalence among veterans increased over time, with a higher rate of increase compared to nonveterans for all pain variables. From 2002 to 2018, there was an absolute increase (95% confidence interval) in pain prevalence among veterans (severe headache or migraine: 2.0% [1.6-2.4%]; facial pain: 1.9% [1.4-2.4%]; neck pain: 4.7% [4.1-5.2%]; joint pain: 11.4% [10.8-11.9%]; low back pain: 10.3% [9.5-11.1%]; any pain: 10.0% [9.6-10.4%]; and multiple pains: 9.9% [9.2-10.6%]). The continued pain prevalence increase among veterans may have implications for health care utilization, highlighting the need for improved pain prevention and care programs for this population with a disproportionate pain burden. PERSPECTIVE: This article uses routinely-collected cross-sectional data that are nationally representative of U.S. adults to present changes in pain prevalence among military veterans compared to nonveterans. The findings underscore the need for improved prevention and pain care programs for veterans, who experienced a widening disproportionate pain burden from 2002 to 2018.
美国退伍军人的疼痛患病率高于非退伍军人。然而,由于之前的趋势研究仅限于使用退伍军人健康管理局的退伍军人,因此尚不清楚疼痛患病率的差异随时间发生了怎样的变化。本重复横断面研究旨在使用全国代表性数据,描述美国退伍军人与非退伍军人总体人群中疼痛患病率的趋势。我们分析了 17 年的全国健康访谈调查(2002-2018 年)数据,每年平均有 29802 名美国成年人(总未加权样本量为 506639 人),每年平均加权人口为 2.297 亿非机构化成年人。退伍军人的加权比例从 2002 年的 11.48%(最高)到 2017 年的 8.41%(最低)。我们发现,在整个研究期间,退伍军人的疼痛患病率与非退伍军人相似或更高,除了严重头痛或偏头痛和面部疼痛。退伍军人的疼痛患病率随时间增加,与非退伍军人相比,所有疼痛变量的增长率更高。从 2002 年到 2018 年,退伍军人的疼痛患病率(严重头痛或偏头痛:2.0%[1.6-2.4%];面部疼痛:1.9%[1.4-2.4%];颈部疼痛:4.7%[4.1-5.2%];关节疼痛:11.4%[10.8-11.9%];下腰痛:10.3%[9.5-11.1%];任何疼痛:10.0%[9.6-10.4%];多种疼痛:9.9%[9.2-10.6%])均出现绝对增加(95%置信区间)。退伍军人持续增加的疼痛患病率可能对医疗保健利用产生影响,突出表明需要为这个疼痛负担不成比例的人群制定更好的疼痛预防和护理计划。观点:本文使用常规收集的全国代表性美国成年人横断面数据,介绍了与非退伍军人相比,退伍军人疼痛患病率的变化。研究结果强调了需要为退伍军人制定更好的预防和疼痛护理计划,因为退伍军人的疼痛负担不成比例,且从 2002 年到 2018 年逐渐加重。