TY - JOUR
T1 - Back Pain in Adolescents: Characteristics, Quality of Life, and Drug Self-Management: A Cross-Sectional Study of 1301 Italian Students
AU - Iacovelli, Chiara
AU - Germanotta, Marco
AU - Coraci, Daniele
AU - Mosca, Rita
AU - Vincenzi, Maria Teresa
AU - Gilardi, Alessandro
AU - Padua, Luca
AU - Aprile, Irene Giovanna
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - OBJECTIVES:
Back pain is one of the major problems for the public health system in the western world. The purposes of this study were to assess back pain in a large cohort of adolescents; to evaluate the prevalence, intensity, and features; and obtain information about drug management of this symptom.
METHODS:
One thousand four hundred seventy-one healthy students aged 14 to 19 years were enrolled in the study. The subjects underwent a face-to-face interview using an ad hoc questionnaire, the Numeric Rating Scale, the Neuropathic Pain Symptom Inventory, and the Short-Form 36 questionnaire.
RESULTS:
Sixty-eight percent of adolescents reported moderate to severe pain, with a higher prevalence of moderate/severe pain in female. The intensity of pain was higher (P < 0.001) in females than in men. A correlation was found between pain and quality of life. Considering the adolescents with severe pain, 21.6% requested a doctor's opinion, and 18% used analgesics (63.2% of them without a doctor's prescription), with a frequency of about 2 times per month.
CONCLUSIONS:
We found that the prevalence of back pain in adolescents is very high, with the consequences on quality of life, and it becomes frequently a self-managed symptom. This should encourage research on the causes of pain in order to limit the risk factors underlying the pain development and obtain a good prevention strategy.
AB - OBJECTIVES:
Back pain is one of the major problems for the public health system in the western world. The purposes of this study were to assess back pain in a large cohort of adolescents; to evaluate the prevalence, intensity, and features; and obtain information about drug management of this symptom.
METHODS:
One thousand four hundred seventy-one healthy students aged 14 to 19 years were enrolled in the study. The subjects underwent a face-to-face interview using an ad hoc questionnaire, the Numeric Rating Scale, the Neuropathic Pain Symptom Inventory, and the Short-Form 36 questionnaire.
RESULTS:
Sixty-eight percent of adolescents reported moderate to severe pain, with a higher prevalence of moderate/severe pain in female. The intensity of pain was higher (P < 0.001) in females than in men. A correlation was found between pain and quality of life. Considering the adolescents with severe pain, 21.6% requested a doctor's opinion, and 18% used analgesics (63.2% of them without a doctor's prescription), with a frequency of about 2 times per month.
CONCLUSIONS:
We found that the prevalence of back pain in adolescents is very high, with the consequences on quality of life, and it becomes frequently a self-managed symptom. This should encourage research on the causes of pain in order to limit the risk factors underlying the pain development and obtain a good prevention strategy.
KW - Back Pain
KW - Rehabilitation
KW - Back Pain
KW - Rehabilitation
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/141888
U2 - 10.1097/PEC.0000000000001876
DO - 10.1097/PEC.0000000000001876
M3 - Article
SN - 0749-5161
VL - 2019
SP - 1
EP - 3
JO - Pediatric Emergency Care
JF - Pediatric Emergency Care
ER -