Pain characteristics, activity limitation and their influence on health-seeking behaviours of community-dwelling older adults with osteoarthritis in Nigeria

Q4 Medicine Annals of African Surgery Pub Date : 2022-03-05 DOI:10.4314/aas.v19i1.8
Joel Olayiwola Faonbi, Dorcas Ayobami Akinlose, Bolaji Agboola, C. Mbada
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Abstract

Background: It is postulated that osteoarthritis (OA) patients' health-seeking behavior depends largely on the disease severity and loss of function. Objective: This study aimed to assess the pain characteristics, activity limitations, and health-seeking behaviors of older adults with OA in Nigeria. Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted among 230 purposively selected community-dwelling older adults in a semi-urban setting in Nigeria. Pain characteristics, activity limitations, and health-seeking behavior were assessed by an interviewer using the Chronic Pain Grade Scale, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index, and Health-Care Seeking Behaviour Questionnaire, respectively. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and inferential statistics (chi-square and multiple regression) to predict factors influencing health-seeking behavior, and we set the alpha level at p<0.05. Results: Pain at the knee (73.0%) was the most defining feature of OA, and it was typically severe (59.1%), frequent (51.3%), felt deep in the bone (47.0%), and associated with morning stiffness (27.4%). OA led to severe activity limitation (54.3%), and 51.7% of the respondents had an overall negative health-seeking behavior. Furthermore, activity limitation was significantly associated with religion (p=0.008) and pain severity (p=0.001). Similarly, the age (p=022), sex (p=0.006), marital status (p=0.005), and ethnicity (p=0.018) were significantly associated with health-seeking behavior. In addition, health-seeking behavior was predicted by cost, preference, ethnicity, employment, marital status, and limitation inactivity. Conclusion: OA pain is prevalent among community-dwelling older adults, it imposes a severe limitation on activities of daily living, and sociodemographic factors influenced the health-seeking behaviors of patients with OA.
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尼日利亚社区居住的老年骨关节炎患者的疼痛特征、活动限制及其对求医行为的影响
背景:骨关节炎(OA)患者的健康寻求行为在很大程度上取决于疾病的严重程度和功能丧失。目的:本研究旨在评估尼日利亚老年OA患者的疼痛特征、活动限制和求医行为。方法:在尼日利亚的半城市环境中,有目的地选择230名社区居住的老年人进行横断面调查。访谈者分别使用慢性疼痛分级量表、西安大略和麦克马斯特大学关节炎指数和求医行为问卷对疼痛特征、活动限制和求医行为进行评估。数据分析采用描述性统计和推理统计(卡方和多元回归)预测影响就医行为的因素,α水平设为p<0.05。结果:膝关节疼痛(73.0%)是OA最明显的特征,通常严重(59.1%),频繁(51.3%),感觉深骨(47.0%),并伴有晨僵直(27.4%)。OA导致严重的活动限制(54.3%),51.7%的受访者总体上有消极的就医行为。此外,活动受限与宗教(p=0.008)和疼痛严重程度(p=0.001)显著相关。同样,年龄(p=022)、性别(p=0.006)、婚姻状况(p=0.005)和种族(p=0.018)与求医行为显著相关。此外,寻医行为可由成本、偏好、种族、就业、婚姻状况和活动受限等因素预测。结论:OA疼痛在社区老年人中普遍存在,严重限制了日常生活活动,社会人口因素影响OA患者的就医行为。
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来源期刊
Annals of African Surgery
Annals of African Surgery Medicine-Surgery
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
48
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍: The Annals of African Surgery ANN. AFR. SURG. (ISSN: 1999-9674 [print], ISSN: 2523-0816 [online]) is a bi-annual publication that aims to provide a medium for the exchange of current information between surgeons in the African region. The journal embraces surgery in all its aspects: basic science, clinical research, experimental research, and surgical education. The Annals of African Surgery will help surgeons in the region keep abreast of developing surgical innovations. This Ethics Policies document is intended to inform the public and all persons affiliated with The Annals of African Surgery of its general ethics policies. Types of articles published: -Original articles -Case reports -Case series -Reviews -Short communications -Letters to the editor -Commentaries Annals of African Surgery publishes manuscripts in the following fields: - Cardiac and thoracic surgery - General surgery - Neurosurgery - Oral and maxillofacial surgery - Trauma and orthopaedic surgery - Otolaryngology (ear, nose and throat surgery) - Paediatric surgery - Plastic and reconstructive surgery - Urology surgery - Gynaecologic surgery - Surgical education -Medical education -Global surgery - Health advocacy - Innovations in surgery - Basic sciences - Anatomical sciences - Genetic and molecular studies
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