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Does the Distribution of Musculoskeletal Pain Shape the Fate of Long-term Sick Leave? A Prospective Cohort Study with Register Follow-up

Overview
Journal Pain
Specialties Neurology
Psychiatry
Date 2024 Jan 29
PMID 38284407
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Abstract

Although multisite pain can markedly reduce work ability, the relevance of the bodily pain distribution as a predictor of long-term sick leave is still unknown. This study aimed to investigate the association between musculoskeletal pain distributions and long-term sick leave in the general working population of Denmark and included 66,177 currently employed wage earners without long-term sick leave during the prior 52 weeks. Participants reported whether they had pain in the lower extremity (hips/knees), upper extremity (neck/shoulders), or the low back. The analysis controlled for age, sex, year of survey reply, educational level, occupational group, psychosocial work factors, body max index, smoking, leisure-time physical activity, and mental health confounders. The results demonstrated that the risk of long-term sick leave increased with the number of pain sites. Compared with no pain, localized pain in any body region increased the risk/hazard by 25% to 29% (HR [95% CI]: 1.29 [1.07-1.54] for pain only in the low back), whereas pain in 2 regions increased the risk by 39% to 44% (HR [95% CI]: 1.41 [1.18-1.69] for pain in the low back + hips/knees). Workers reporting pain in all 3 regions experienced a 72% increased risk (HR [95% CI]: 1.72 [1.55-1.91]). Thus, the number of pain regions seems to matter more than the exact pain location. The spatial extension of musculoskeletal pain in workers functions as a gradient system, where pain spread throughout the body is an independent indicator of the high risk of long-term sick leave.

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Cross-cultural adaptation and validation of the Spanish version of the Prevent for Work questionnaire.

Blasco-Abadia J, Bellosta-Lopez P, Domenech-Garcia V, Palsson T, Christensen S, Hoegh M Front Public Health. 2025; 12():1453492.

PMID: 39839426 PMC: 11747122. DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1453492.