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The association between lower back pain and health status, work productivity, and health care resource use in Japan

INTRODUCTION: This study investigated the effect of pain severity on health status, work productivity, health care resource use, and costs among respondents with lower back pain (LBP), in Japan. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Data from the 2013 Japan National Health and Wellness Survey, a survey of Japanese...

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Autores principales: Sadosky, Alesia B, DiBonaventura, Marco, Cappelleri, Joseph C, Ebata, Nozomi, Fujii, Koichi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4348130/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25750546
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/JPR.S76649
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author Sadosky, Alesia B
DiBonaventura, Marco
Cappelleri, Joseph C
Ebata, Nozomi
Fujii, Koichi
author_facet Sadosky, Alesia B
DiBonaventura, Marco
Cappelleri, Joseph C
Ebata, Nozomi
Fujii, Koichi
author_sort Sadosky, Alesia B
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: This study investigated the effect of pain severity on health status, work productivity, health care resource use, and costs among respondents with lower back pain (LBP), in Japan. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Data from the 2013 Japan National Health and Wellness Survey, a survey of Japanese adults, were analyzed (N=30,000). All respondents provided informed consent, and the protocol was institutional review board-approved. Respondents who reported experiencing LBP were propensity score–matched to those without LBP, based on demographics and health history. Using regression modeling, patients with mild, moderate, and severe pain were compared against matched controls, with respect to health status (Mental and Physical Component Summary scores, and health utilities from the Short Form(®)-36 Health Survey version 2), work productivity (Work Productivity and Activity Impairment – General Health version), health care resource use, and annual per-patient costs (estimated using published annual wages and resource use event costs). RESULTS: A total 1,897 patients reported experiencing LBP in the past month (6.32%); 52.45% reported their pain as mild, 32.79% as moderate, and 14.76% as severe. Increasing pain severity was associated with significantly lower levels of mental component scores (46.99 [mild], 42.93 [moderate], and 40.58 [severe] vs 48.10 [matched controls]), physical component scores (50.29 [mild], 46.74 [moderate], and 43.94 [severe] vs 52.93 [matched controls]), and health utilities (0.72 [mild], 0.66 [moderate], and 0.62 [severe] vs 0.76 [matched controls]) (all P<0.05). Indirect costs were significantly higher (P<0.05) among those with moderate (¥1.69 million [MM] [equivalent to $17,000, based on United States dollar exchange rates on September 1, 2014]) and severe (¥1.88 MM [$19,000]) pain, relative to matched controls (¥0.95 MM [$9,500]). Direct costs were only marginally different (P=0.05) between those with severe pain and matched controls (¥1.33 MM [$13,000] vs ¥0.54 MM [$5,000]). CONCLUSION: Increasing pain severity among respondents with LBP was associated with significantly worse health status, to a clinically-relevant degree, along with greater indirect and direct costs, in Japan.
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spelling pubmed-43481302015-03-06 The association between lower back pain and health status, work productivity, and health care resource use in Japan Sadosky, Alesia B DiBonaventura, Marco Cappelleri, Joseph C Ebata, Nozomi Fujii, Koichi J Pain Res Original Research INTRODUCTION: This study investigated the effect of pain severity on health status, work productivity, health care resource use, and costs among respondents with lower back pain (LBP), in Japan. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Data from the 2013 Japan National Health and Wellness Survey, a survey of Japanese adults, were analyzed (N=30,000). All respondents provided informed consent, and the protocol was institutional review board-approved. Respondents who reported experiencing LBP were propensity score–matched to those without LBP, based on demographics and health history. Using regression modeling, patients with mild, moderate, and severe pain were compared against matched controls, with respect to health status (Mental and Physical Component Summary scores, and health utilities from the Short Form(®)-36 Health Survey version 2), work productivity (Work Productivity and Activity Impairment – General Health version), health care resource use, and annual per-patient costs (estimated using published annual wages and resource use event costs). RESULTS: A total 1,897 patients reported experiencing LBP in the past month (6.32%); 52.45% reported their pain as mild, 32.79% as moderate, and 14.76% as severe. Increasing pain severity was associated with significantly lower levels of mental component scores (46.99 [mild], 42.93 [moderate], and 40.58 [severe] vs 48.10 [matched controls]), physical component scores (50.29 [mild], 46.74 [moderate], and 43.94 [severe] vs 52.93 [matched controls]), and health utilities (0.72 [mild], 0.66 [moderate], and 0.62 [severe] vs 0.76 [matched controls]) (all P<0.05). Indirect costs were significantly higher (P<0.05) among those with moderate (¥1.69 million [MM] [equivalent to $17,000, based on United States dollar exchange rates on September 1, 2014]) and severe (¥1.88 MM [$19,000]) pain, relative to matched controls (¥0.95 MM [$9,500]). Direct costs were only marginally different (P=0.05) between those with severe pain and matched controls (¥1.33 MM [$13,000] vs ¥0.54 MM [$5,000]). CONCLUSION: Increasing pain severity among respondents with LBP was associated with significantly worse health status, to a clinically-relevant degree, along with greater indirect and direct costs, in Japan. Dove Medical Press 2015-02-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4348130/ /pubmed/25750546 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/JPR.S76649 Text en © 2015 Sadosky et al. This work is published by Dove Medical Press Limited, and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License The full terms of the License are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Original Research
Sadosky, Alesia B
DiBonaventura, Marco
Cappelleri, Joseph C
Ebata, Nozomi
Fujii, Koichi
The association between lower back pain and health status, work productivity, and health care resource use in Japan
title The association between lower back pain and health status, work productivity, and health care resource use in Japan
title_full The association between lower back pain and health status, work productivity, and health care resource use in Japan
title_fullStr The association between lower back pain and health status, work productivity, and health care resource use in Japan
title_full_unstemmed The association between lower back pain and health status, work productivity, and health care resource use in Japan
title_short The association between lower back pain and health status, work productivity, and health care resource use in Japan
title_sort association between lower back pain and health status, work productivity, and health care resource use in japan
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4348130/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25750546
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/JPR.S76649
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