Study finds
some people
in pain unlikely to seek treatment
Newswise — A
Rochester-based study has found more than 20 percent of
people with chronic pain did not seek physician help for
their pain. The study supports the opinion of many
physicians that a large segment of patients has an unmet
need for pain care.
Increased media
attention and physician education are recommended to
decrease the number of “silent sufferers,” according to
the study. Published in the February issue of Mayo
Clinic Proceedings, the study looked at 3,575 people. Of
the 2,211 respondents who reported pain of more than
three months’ duration, 22.4 percent (497) stated that
they had not informed their physician about their pain.
The survey covered a cross-section of residents of
Olmsted County, Minn., from March through June 2004.
It is unclear whether
the reasons for not seeking treatment are limited to
minor impact of pain on the person, or for other reasons
such as poor previous experiences with pain care,
perceived lack of effective treatments, and barriers to
health care; lack of medical insurance, for example.
The importance of pain
management has gained increasing recognition in the last
decade. In 1995, the American Pain Society declared pain
to be the fifth vital sign, a designation to increase
pain awareness among health care professionals.
The rapid increases in
pain medicine prescription hint at a population of
patients with unmet pain needs, according to the study.
Barbara Yawn, M.D., an
Olmsted Medical Center physician and an author of the
study, says, “Identification of patients in pain is
essential to successful pain care. Despite significant
efforts, successful pain care clearly is not happening.
Physicians have a responsibility to ask their patients
about chronic pain.”
Pain’s health impact
on society is significant. Pain sufferers report that
their pain interferes with their general activities and
sleep. Approximately 25 percent of “silent sufferers,”
those not telling their physician about their pain,
indicated at least moderate interference with both
general activity and sleep. A larger proportion of vocal
sufferers (43.2 percent) showed comparable levels of
interference. In general, the location of the pain had
little effect on whether the patients reported their
pain. The study found that chronic pain suffers who do
not seek treatment tend to be younger men whose pain has
less impact on their usual activities.
Other researchers
included Emmeline Watkins, Ph.D., from the Department of
Epidemiology at AstraZeneca, and Peter Wollan, Ph.D.,
from Olmsted Medical Center, and Joseph Melton, M.D.,
from Mayo Clinic. The study was supported by a grant
from AstraZeneca.
A peer-review journal,
Mayo Clinic Proceedings publishes original articles and
reviews dealing with clinical and laboratory medicine,
clinical research, basic science research and clinical
epidemiology. Mayo Clinic Proceedings is published
monthly by Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and
Research as part of its commitment to the medical
education of physicians. The journal has been published
for more than 75 years and has a circulation of 130,000
nationally and internationally. Articles are available
online at www.mayoclinicproceedings.com.