{"database":"biostudies-literature","file_versions":[],"scores":{"citationCount":0,"reanalysisCount":0,"viewCount":56,"searchCount":0},"additional":{"submitter":["Jay MA"],"funding":["National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and King’s College London","Medical Research Council","Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children"],"pagination":["e024250"],"full_dataset_link":["https://www.ebi.ac.uk/biostudies/studies/S-EPMC6429846"],"repository":["biostudies-literature"],"omics_type":["Unknown"],"volume":["9(3)"],"pubmed_abstract":["<h4>Objectives</h4>To investigate associations between a range of different indicators of socioeconomic position (SEP: occupational class, education, household overcrowding and tenure, and experience of financial hardship) across life and chronic widespread and regional pain (CWP and CRP) at age 68.<h4>Design</h4>Prospective birth cohort; the Medical Research Council National Survey of Health and Development.<h4>Setting</h4>England, Scotland and Wales.<h4>Participants</h4>Up to 2378 men and women who have been followed-up since birth in 1946 to age 68.<h4>Primary outcome measures</h4>On the basis of their self-report of pain at age 68, participants were classified as: CWP (American College of Rheumatology criteria), CRP (pain of at least 3 months' duration but that does not meet the definition of CWP), other pain (<3 months in duration) or no pain.<h4>Results</h4>At age 68, the prevalence of CWP was 13.3% and 7.8% in women and men, respectively, and that of CRP was 32.3% and 28.7% in women and men, respectively. There was no clear evidence that indicators of SEP in childhood or later adulthood were associated with pain. Having experienced (vs not) financial hardship and being a tenant (vs owner-occupier) in earlier adulthood were both associated with an increased risk of CWP; for example, moderate hardship adjusted relative risk ratio (RRR<sub>adj</sub>) 2.32 (95% CI: 1.19 to 4.52) and most hardship RRR<sub>adj</sub> 4.44 (95% CI: 2.02 to 9.77). Accumulation of financial hardship across earlier and later adulthood was also associated with an increased risk of CWP.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Consideration of socioeconomic factors in earlier adulthood may be important when identifying targets for intervention to prevent CWP in later life."],"journal":["BMJ open"],"pubmed_title":["Lifetime socioeconomic circumstances and chronic pain in later adulthood: findings from a British birth cohort study."],"pmcid":["PMC6429846"],"funding_grant_id":["MR/L010399/1","MC_UU_12019/4","MR/R016372/1"],"pubmed_authors":["Jay MA","Cooper R","Bendayan R","Muthuri SG"],"view_count":["56"],"additional_accession":[]},"is_claimable":false,"name":"Lifetime socioeconomic circumstances and chronic pain in later adulthood: findings from a British birth cohort study.","description":"<h4>Objectives</h4>To investigate associations between a range of different indicators of socioeconomic position (SEP: occupational class, education, household overcrowding and tenure, and experience of financial hardship) across life and chronic widespread and regional pain (CWP and CRP) at age 68.<h4>Design</h4>Prospective birth cohort; the Medical Research Council National Survey of Health and Development.<h4>Setting</h4>England, Scotland and Wales.<h4>Participants</h4>Up to 2378 men and women who have been followed-up since birth in 1946 to age 68.<h4>Primary outcome measures</h4>On the basis of their self-report of pain at age 68, participants were classified as: CWP (American College of Rheumatology criteria), CRP (pain of at least 3 months' duration but that does not meet the definition of CWP), other pain (<3 months in duration) or no pain.<h4>Results</h4>At age 68, the prevalence of CWP was 13.3% and 7.8% in women and men, respectively, and that of CRP was 32.3% and 28.7% in women and men, respectively. There was no clear evidence that indicators of SEP in childhood or later adulthood were associated with pain. Having experienced (vs not) financial hardship and being a tenant (vs owner-occupier) in earlier adulthood were both associated with an increased risk of CWP; for example, moderate hardship adjusted relative risk ratio (RRR<sub>adj</sub>) 2.32 (95% CI: 1.19 to 4.52) and most hardship RRR<sub>adj</sub> 4.44 (95% CI: 2.02 to 9.77). Accumulation of financial hardship across earlier and later adulthood was also associated with an increased risk of CWP.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Consideration of socioeconomic factors in earlier adulthood may be important when identifying targets for intervention to prevent CWP in later life.","dates":{"release":"2019-01-01T00:00:00Z","publication":"2019 Mar","modification":"2024-11-09T09:24:03.822Z","creation":"2019-06-05T15:43:32Z"},"accession":"S-EPMC6429846","cross_references":{"pubmed":["30850405"],"doi":["10.1136/bmjopen-2018-024250"]}}