| Literature DB >> 24365383 |
Harald Breivik1, Elon Eisenberg, Tony O'Brien.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic pain is common in Europe and elsewhere and its under treatment confers a substantial burden on individuals, employers, healthcare systems and society in general. Indeed, the personal and socioeconomic impact of chronic pain is as great as, or greater, than that of other established healthcare priorities. In light of review of recently published data confirming its clinical and socioeconomic impact, this paper argues that chronic pain should be ranked alongside other conditions of established priority in Europe. We outline strategies to help overcome barriers to effective pain care resulting in particular from deficiencies in education and access to interdisciplinary pain management services. We also address the confusion that exists between proper clinical and scientific uses of opioid medications and their potential for misuse and diversion, as reflected in international variations in the access to, and availability of, these agents. DISCUSSION: As the economic costs are driven in part by the costs of lost productivity, absenteeism and early retirement, pain management should aim to fully rehabilitate patients, rather than merely to relieve pain. Accredited education of physicians and allied health professionals regarding state-of-the-art pain management is crucial. Some progress has been made in this area, but further provision and incentivization is required. We support a tiered approach to pain management, whereby patients with pain uncontrolled by non-specialists are able to consult a physician with a pain competency or a specialist in pain medicine, who in turn can recruit the services of other professionals on a case-by-case basis. A fully integrated interdisciplinary pain service should ideally be available to patients with refractory pain. Governments and healthcare systems should ensure that their policies on controlled medications are balanced, safeguarding public health without undue restrictions that compromise patient care, and that physician education programmes support these aims.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24365383 PMCID: PMC3878786 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-1229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Prevalence of chronic pain in epidemiological studies among adults in selected studies in Europe
| Survey method | Telephone | Postal or online | Postal | Postal | Postal | Telephone |
| Sample source and size | Telephone directories (n = 46,394) | National Danish Health Survey (n = 14,925) | National registry of general population (n = 599) | 33 general practices (n = 1204) | Total regional adult population (n = 4782) | Telephone directories (n = 5094) |
| Chronic pain definition2 | ≥6 months duration, moderate or severe, and pain experienced in the last month and at least twice a week | ≥6 months duration | >3 months duration | >3 months duration | Moderate to severe pain (SF-8) in at least three of five consecutive 3-monthly measurements | ≥3 months duration |
| Prevalence of chronic pain (95% CI) | All: 19% (ND) | All: 26.8% (26.1–27.5%) | All: 30.6% (ND) | Non-cancer: 35.5% (32.8–38.2%) | 31% (30–33%) | All: 36.7% (35.3–38.2%) |
| (12% in Spain to 30% in Norway) | Non-cancer: 24.7% (ND) | |||||
| Prevalence higher in | Women, older age | Women, older age, various co-morbidities, non-Western background,3 underweight or obese | ND | Older age, manual workers, unemployed | Women, older age, lower educational level, lower household income, higher BMI | Women, older age retired, unemployed, lower educational level |
BMI, body mass index; CI, confidence intervals; ND, no data; SF-8, Short-Form 8 health survey.
1Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the UK.
2The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) defines chronic pain as that lasting more than 3 months [16].
3As determined by the birthplace and citizenship of the respondent and the parental birthplace.
Recent studies on economic impact of chronic pain and conditions with which it is associated
| Data source | Postal survey | National and regional healthcare administrative registries | National administrative healthcare registries | Medical Expenditure Panel Survey |
| Pain definition | Chronic pain and conditions it | Diagnoses related to chronic pain | Pain-intensive diagnoses (n = 1,918,823) | Pain limiting ability to work; diagnoses of joint pain or arthritis; disability limiting ability to work (n = 20,214) |
| features (n = 140) | (n = 837,896) | |||
| Total cost/patient/year | €5,665 | €6,429 | Healthcare costs: DKK34,784–208,830/year (depending on condition), 2010 | ND |
| Type of cost (% of total) | Direct healthcare: 52% | Direct healthcare: 41% | Direct healthcare: 71% | Direct healthcare: 47% |
| Indirect: 48% | Indirect: 59% | Indirect: 29% | Indirect: 53% | |
| National cost estimate/year | €5.34 billion | €32 billion | DKK17.8 billion | $560–635 billion |
| ~3% of GDP | ~10% of GDP | ~4% of GDPa |
GDP, gross domestic product; PRIME, Prevalence, Impact and Cost of Chronic Pain; ND, no data.
aNot in original publication. Assumes US GDP in 2010 of US$14.4 trillion [48]).
Figure 1Annual mean costs per patient in Sweden (2008) in patients with a diagnosis related to chronic pain, by diagnosis group and type of cost [43].