Variation in Back Pain Between Countries
- 1 May 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Spine
- Vol. 29 (9), 1017-1021
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007632-200405010-00013
Abstract
Cross-sectional survey with personal interviews.To study national differences in subjective health, back pain, and self-perceived disability between the United Kingdom and Germany.Back pain is a leading health problem in most Western populations, causing enormous costs to the national health systems. Different prevalence rates were reported from many countries, but rarely as a result of a direct comparison based on an identical study design.A total of 6,235 male and female participants 50 to 79 years of age (population-based stratified random samples) were recruited in 6 British and 8 German study centers. The interviewer administered standardized questionnaire included a section about presence and severity of back pain.Past and current back pain was more frequent among German participants and different between East and West German centers. The differences in back pain prevalence rates could not be explained by less favorable risk profiles among German respondents.Intercultural differences in perceiving or reporting back pain can be hypothesized as the most likely explanation of the markedly different prevalence rates of the disorder in the United Kingdom and East and West Germany.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Formal education and back pain: a reviewJournal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 2001
- Health Impact Associated with Vertebral Deformities: Results from the European Vertebral Osteoporosis Study (EVOS)Osteoporosis International, 1998
- Die europäische Studie zur vertebralen Osteoporose (EVOS): Teilnahmebereitschaft und Selektionsverzerrung in DeutschlandMedizinische Klinik, 1998
- Inappropriate use of bivariable analysis to screen risk factors for use in multivariable analysisJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1996
- Differences in the characteristics of responders and non-responders in a prevalence survey of vertebral osteoporosisOsteoporosis International, 1995
- Prävalenz und Schweregrad von Rückenschmerzen in der Lübecker BevölkerungAktuelle Rheumatologie, 1995
- Survey response rates: national and regional differences in a European multicentre study of vertebral osteoporosis.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1995
- Low back pain in eight areas of Britain.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1992
- Descriptive Epidemiology of Low-back Pain and Its Related Medical Care in the United StatesSpine, 1987
- A comparison of low back pain patients in the United States and New Zealand: Psychosocial and economic factors affecting severity of disabilityPain, 1985