There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence and demographic risk factors
of chronic pain and its comorbidity with depression. Computer-assisted telephone interviewing
was utilized to obtain a representative community sample in the state of Michigan
(n = 1,179). The prevalence of chronic pain due to any cause was 21.9%. Approximately
35% of participants with chronic pain also had comorbid depression (7.7% of the entire
sample). Depression was not associated with pain types or sites. A multinomial-regression
analysis revealed several demographic correlates of chronic pain and depression. Participants
with chronic pain or comorbid pain and depression were more likely to be older, female,
employed less than full-time, and have less education than persons without either
condition. Logistic regression analyses showed that younger participants were more
likely to have comorbid pain and depression than chronic pain only. A similar but
marginally significant effect was found for African American participants. Compared
to the depression-only group, those in the comorbid group were more likely to be women
and middle-aged. These findings provide additional evidence on the prevalence of comorbid
pain and depression in the community and suggest that certain demographic groups with
chronic pain may especially benefit from depression screenings.
This article reports on the prevalence of chronic pain and co-occurring depression
in a representative community sample. The high prevalence rates of pain and comorbid
depression point to the clinical importance of assessing depression in chronic pain
samples.