Does pain severity guide selection to multimodal pain rehabilitation across gender?
Issue
European Journal of Pain
Abstract
Background
Studies
have addressed the effect of multimodal pain rehabilitation (MMR),
whereas criteria for selection are sparse. This study examines whether
higher scores on musculoskeletal pain measures are associated with
selection to MMR, and whether this differs across gender.
Method
A
clinical population of 262 male and 589 female patients was recruited
consecutively during 3 years, 2007–2010. The patients were referred from
primary care to a pain rehabilitation clinic in Northern Sweden for
assessment and selection to MMR. Register-based data on self-reported
pain were linked to patients' records where outcome (MMR or not) was
stated. We modelled odds ratios for selection to MMR by higher scores on
validated pain measures (pain severity, interference with daily life,
pain sites and localized pain vs. varying pain location). Covariates
were age, educational level and multiple pain measures. Anxiety and
depression (Hospital, Anxiety and Depression Scale) and working status
were used in sensitivity tests.
Results
Higher
scores of self-reported pain were not associated with selection to MMR
in multivariate models. Among women, higher scores on pain severity,
pain sites and varying pain location (localized pain = reference) were
negatively associated with selection to MMR. After adjustment for
multiple pain measures, the negative odds ratio for varying location
persisted (OR = 0.59, 95% CI = 0.39–0.89).
Conclusion
Higher
scores on self-reported pain did not guide selection to MMR and a
negative trend was found among women. Studies of referral patterns and
decision processes may contribute to a better understanding of the
clinical practice that decides selection to MMR.
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