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Perception of musculoskeletal pain in the state of confinement: associated factors

Carlos Carpintero-Rubio, Bárbara Torres-Chica, María Alexandra Guadrón-Romero, Laura Visiers-Jiménez, David Peña-Otero

2021Revista Latino-Americana de Enfermagem14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: to describe the perception of musculoskeletal pain in the population and how the state of confinement (adopted as a measure to control contagion by COVID-19) has interfered with it, as well as identifying the sociodemographic, occupational, physical, and psychosocial factors involved. METHOD: an observational, cross-sectional and analytical study, with simple random probabilistic sampling, aimed at residents in Spain over 18 years old during the confinement period. An ad hoc survey was conducted, consisting in 59 items. RESULTS: a total of 3,247 surveys were answered. Persistent musculoskeletal pain or significant episodes thereof increased 22.2% during confinement. The main location was the spine (49.5%). The related factors were decreased physical activity, increased seated position, and use of electronic devices. The psychological impact of confinement was also related to the perception of musculoskeletal pain. CONCLUSION: the state of confinement causes an increase in the perception of musculoskeletal pain. The identification of a particularly sensitive population profile, as well as that of the related factors, allows establishing multidisciplinary approaches in health promotion.

Topics & Concepts

Musculoskeletal painMedicineMultidisciplinary approachPerceptionPopulationPhysical therapyIdentification (biology)Physical medicine and rehabilitationMusculoskeletal disorderState (computer science)Pain perceptionDiseaseState of healthMusculoskeletal diseaseMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitationOccupational Health and PerformanceCOVID-19 and Mental Health
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