AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the prevalence of headaches and identifies barriers that prevent people from seeking help, focusing on the relationship between those barriers and headache-related disabilities.
  • High scores in help-seeking barriers like the need for control and self-reliance suggest that individuals often underestimate their headaches, which affects their willingness to seek assistance.
  • Socioeconomic and occupational factors significantly influence these barriers, highlighting that those with lower socioeconomic status face more substantial challenges in seeking care and are often more disabled by their headaches.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Headache is among the first three most prevalent disorders with a wide treatment gap due to barriers in help seeking. Headache has been associated with disability. However, the relationship of barriers to help-seeking and disability are unexplored.

Aim: To find out the barriers to help seeking and its relationship with headache related disability in patients with headache.

Materials And Methods: In this hospital based cross-sectional study, 200 consecutive subjects with headache attending a tertiary care centre were recruited as per selection criteria and assessed with Sociodemographic & Clinical Proforma, Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI), Barriers to Help Seeking Scale (BHSS), The Henry Ford Hospital Headache Disability Inventory (HDI).

Results: High mean score was observed on BHSS subscale need for control and self reliance (19.45; SD ±9.66) and minimizing problem and resignation (10.02; SD ±6.98). Mean score on the HDI was 25.65 (SD ± 14.09). Socioeconomic status of the patient was statistically significant and positively associated with need for control and self reliance (p=0.035), concrete barriers and distrust of care givers (p=0.039), emotional control (p=0.005), and privacy (p=0.002). Occupational status had significant association with need for control and self-reliance (p=0.01), minimizing problem and resignation (p=0.033), and emotional control (p=0.006). Score on hospital headache disability inventory significantly predicted the value of score on concrete barriers and distrust of caregivers domain of HDI (p=0.001).

Conclusion: Autonomy and under estimation of seriousness of headache are common barriers to help seeking. Pattern of help seeking barriers may vary with socio-economic status and occupational status, while disability varies with gender and severity of headache. Headache associated disability is positively associated with concrete barriers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5121768PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7860/JCDR/2016/22624.8621DOI Listing

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