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The Burden of Headache Disorders in the Adult Population of Morocco: Estimates, and a Health-care Needs Assessment, from a Cross-sectional Population-based Door-to-door Survey

Overview
Journal J Headache Pain
Publisher Biomed Central
Date 2024 Dec 30
PMID 39736514
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Abstract

Background: We have previously shown headache disorders to be prevalent in in the adult general population of Morocco, especially migraine (30.8%) and headache on ≥ 15 days/month (H15+; 10.5%). This study, collecting data from the same population-based sample, is the first to estimate headache-attributed burden not only in Morocco but, more widely, in the Maghreb countries of North Africa.

Methods: We used the standard methodology and questionnaire developed by the Global Campaign against Headache. Cluster-based random sampling generated a sample (N = 2,575) representative of the general population aged 18-65 years. Interviews conducted face-to-face enquired into symptom burden (headache frequency, usual duration and usual intensity), and impaired participation in paid work, household work and social or leisure activities during the preceding 3 months. Further enquiry was into headache yesterday (HY). We calculated population-level estimates by factoring in prevalence. Needs assessment estimated the population proportion in need of headache-related health care based on likelihood of benefit.

Results: Participants with headache of any type spent, on average, 12.5% of their time with headache of intensity rated 2.3 on a scale of 1-3. According to age- and gender-corrected estimates, 7.2-8.4% of all time in the population (calculated by two methods) was spent with headache, H15 + accounting for well over half of this. Impaired participation measured as lost time due to headache averaged 0.5 days from paid work, 1.6 days from household work and 0.3 days from social or leisure activities during the preceding 3 months. Of those with HY (17.8% of the sample), 24.1% of males and 50.9% of females could do nothing or less than half of their planned activity yesterday. At population level this diluted to 7.0% of all activity lost to headache. At least 30% of the population were estimated to need headache-related health care.

Conclusion: Headache disorders cause much ill health in the adult population of Morocco. While this will be of obvious concern to health policy in Morocco, the call for provision of health care for almost one third of this population is challenging. On the other hand, economic policy should recognise the lost-productivity costs of inadequately treated headache, especially migraine.

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