Background/Purpose:
Low back pain (LBP) affects 67% to 84% of persons residing in industrialized countries.1 With an estimated 2% of the workforce being compensated for work days lost to back injuries, LBP is responsible for the more lost workdays and disability claims than any other health condition.2,3 The combined direct and indirect costs have been estimated to be $90 billion annually.3
Of Kentucky’s 29,886 occupational injuries (2010-2011), 28% were low back injuries.4 Ninety-two of Kentucky’s 120 counties are designated as medically underserved populations; 71 of these 92 counties are designated as rural areas (2013 USDA Rural/Urban Continuum Codes).5 We aim to report the percentage of women who report LBP per Kentucky county, compare rates of LBP in rural versus urban counties, and report predictors of LBP.
Methods:
We extracted data (county of residence, self-reported LBP, and demographics) from the Kentucky Women’s Health Registry, a database with over 16,000 women participants, and used descriptive statistics, two-sample t-tests with unequal variances, and multiple linear regression modeling during data analysis. Data was weight-adjusted based on the percentage of the county population represented in the database.
Results:
Approximately 27.3% (standard deviation (SD)=6%; range=9-46%) (median=27%; mode=27%) of those women residing in an urban county reported LBP; 33.5% of women residing in a rural area reported LBP (SD=9.3%; range=17-64%) (median=33%; mode=35%). Of all Kentucky women, 31.7% (SD=8.9%; range=10-64%) (median=31%; mode=27%) reported having low back pain (Table 1). Using two-sample t-tests, those women who lived in a rural area were significantly more likely to report LBP when compared to those women residing in an urban area (p<.0001). Predictors of LBP using multiple linear regression modeling (residence, disability status, body mass index (BMI), physical activity, and age), were rural residence and BMI. Women residing in a rural county were 5.1% more likely to report LBP compared to urban counties (p=0.0016) and for every 5 unit increase in BMI, there was a 9.1% increase in the likelihood of reported LBP (p=0.0005).
Conclusion:
Study findings suggest that women with increased BMI who reside in a rural area are significantly more likely to report LBP; thus a significant health disparity has identified.
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Table 1. LBP per rural/urban continuum code. |
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N |
% reporting LBP |
Std. Deviation |
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1.00 |
14 |
29.7% |
.06 |
|
|
2.00 |
11 |
26.8% |
.03 |
|
|
3.00 |
10 |
24.4% |
.07 |
|
|
4.00* |
2 |
29.5% |
.01 |
|
|
5.00* |
4 |
27.8% |
.04 |
|
|
6.00* |
19 |
35.0% |
.08 |
|
|
7.00* |
24 |
29.9% |
.07 |
|
|
8.00* |
11 |
31.0% |
.07 |
|
|
9.00* |
25 |
38.2% |
.12 |
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Total |
120 |
31.7% |
.09 |
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Disclosure:
E. G. Salt,
None;
Y. Gokun,
None;
H. Bush,
None;
L. J. Crofford,
None.
« Back to 2013 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting
ACR Meeting Abstracts - https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/the-role-of-rural-residence-in-low-back-pain/