
A Burden and Prevalence Analysis of Chronic Pain by Distinct Case Definitions among Active Duty U.S. Military Service Members, 2018
Author(s) -
Hunter Jackson Smith,
Stephen B Taubman,
Leslie L. Clark
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
pain physician
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.31
H-Index - 99
eISSN - 2150-1149
pISSN - 1533-3159
DOI - 10.36076/ppj.2020/23/e429
Subject(s) - medicine , chronic pain , navy , active duty , military medicine , military service , military personnel , population , health care , public health , medical diagnosis , medical record , family medicine , physical therapy , environmental health , nursing , pathology , surgery , archaeology , economic growth , political science , law , economics , history
Background: Chronic pain is a growing problem in the military, and the methods by whichwe have to perform epidemiologic surveillance are insufficient. It represents both a public healthand military readiness concern, as those who suffer from it experience adverse impacts on workproductivity, physiological health, and quality of life.Objectives: This study was designed to assess the prevalence of chronic pain among activecomponent military service members utilizing 2 distinct, published case definitions. It sought todescribe the demographics and military characteristics of those receiving chronic pain diagnoses.The study also aimed to provide improved granularity regarding military chronic pain patients’ painseverity and its impacts on their job performance.Study Design: Cross-sectional analysis for 2018.Setting: This analysis utilized data available from the Defense Medical Surveillance System, adatabase containing longitudinal data on service members.Methods: Patients: The surveillance population consisted of all active component servicemembers from the U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines of all grades serving at any point duringthe surveillance period of January 1, 2018 through December 31, 2018.Measurement: Diagnoses were ascertained from the administrative records of all medicalencounters of individuals who received care through the Military Health System or civilian referrals.Data from patients’ Periodic Health Assessment (PHA) encounters were also utilized to derive moregranular data regarding their experiences of pain.Results: Case Definition 1, more specific for identifying chronic pain, identified a more severesubset of chronic pain patients when compared against Case Definition 2, a more comprehensivemethod for identifying potential chronic pain patients. Case Definition 1 found a higher prevalenceof impactful pain (CD1: 36.7% vs. CD2: 23.5%), and Case Definition 1 patients are more likely tobe on limited duty and require treatment related to their pain. Several demographic groups werealso found to be at increased risk of chronic pain diagnosis, including women, black non-Hispanic,Army, older age, and enlisted.Limitations: First, in utilizing administrative data, this allows for the possibility of misclassificationbias. Second, some deployment data still used ICD-9 coding even in 2018, resulting in a minorunderestimation by approximately 30 patients and approximately 60 encounters. Third, theprevalence estimates for the demographics were not adjusted for potential confounders.Conclusions: Chronic pain has been difficult to define via administrative and screening data, and assuch its burden and prevalence estimates can vary considerably depending on which case definitionis used. This is of particular importance in the U.S. military, as these estimates can significantly impactour calculations for force readiness and the protection of our national security. To our knowledge,this study is the first of its kind to examine chronic pain across the entirety of the U.S. armed forcesand to utilize granular, annually collected PHA data in this way. The results of this exploratory analysiscould be used as a template to better characterize the burden of chronic pain from a populationbased perspective and monitor the effectiveness of pain management strategies. Key words: Chronic pain, military, case definition, surveillance, epidemiology