Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-ndmmz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-28T23:44:39.766Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Pain drawings, interpreter support and clinical findings among immigrant patients on sick leave in Swedish primary health care

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 October 2019

Monica Löfvander*
Affiliation:
Department of Neurobiology, Caring Sciences and Society, Center for Family Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Huddinge, Sweden Center for Clinical Research Västmanland – Uppsala University, Västerås, Sweden Department of Public Health and Caring Sciences, Family Medicine and Preventive Medicine Section, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
*
Author for correspondence: Monica Löfvander, Center for Clinical Research Västmanland – Uppsala University, ingång 29, Västmanlands sjukhus, SE 72189 Västerås, Sweden. E-mail: Monica.Lofvander@regionvastmanland.se
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Aim:

To evaluate the spread of pain and its correlates among immigrant patients on sick leave.

Background:

Backache, outspread pain and sick-leave questions are problematic to handle primary health care, especially in multicultural settings.

Methods:

Two hundred and thirty-five patients 20–45 years on paid sick leave (59% women, 93% foreign-born, mostly non-Europeans). Many had little formal education. One-third had professional interpreter support. The patients pointed out on their bodies where they felt pain. This information was transferred on a pain drawing [pain drawing fields (PDFs) 0–18] by a doctor. Major depression and psychosocial stressors were assessed using Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Nociceptive locations for pain were established (pain-sites 0–18). Dependent variable was the number of PDFs. Independent variables were social data, sick leave, interpreter, depression, stress levels and number of pain sites. Calculations were done using descriptive methods and multi-variable linear regression in full models, by gender.

Findings:

Many patients had depression (51% women versus 32% men). A majority were exposed to psychosocial stressors. Women had more PDFs, in median 5 [inter-quartile ranges (IQR) 4–8] versus men 3 (IQR 2–5), and also more pain sites, in median 3 (IQR 2–5) versus men in median 2 (IQR 1–3). For men, the regression calculations revealed that numbers of PDFs associated only with increasing numbers of pain sites (B 0.871 P < 0.001). For women, this association was weaker (B 0.364, P < 0.001), with significant values also for age (B 0.103) and sick leave > one year (B 0.767, P = 0.010), and a negative predicting value for interpreter support (B −1.198, P < 0.043). To conclude, PDFs associated often with somatic findings but varied much among the women. This implies potential problems regarding cause, function and sick leave questions. However, support by professional interpreters may facilitate a shared understanding with immigrant women having long-standing pain.

Type
Research
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2019

Introduction

Chronic backpain, outspread pain and sick-leave issues are problematic to handle in primary care, especially when the objective signs are few or irrelevant for assessing work capacity and when many socio-cultural circumstances are at hand (Wynne-Jones et al., Reference Wynne-Jones, Mallen, Main and Dunn2010; Gerhardt et al., Reference Gerhardt, Hartmann, Blumenstiel, Tesarz and Eich2014; Wainwright et al., Reference Wainwright, Wainwright, Keogh and Eccleston2015; Ljungquist et al., Reference Ljungquist, Hinas, Nilsson, Gustavsson, Arrelöv and Alexanderson2015; Coggon et al., Reference Coggon, Ntani, Walker-Bone, Palmer, Felli, Harari, Barrero, Felknor, Gimeno, Cattrell, Vargas-Prada, BonziniI, Solidaki, Merisalu, Habib, Sadeghian, Kadir, Warnakulasuriya, Matsudaira, Nyantumbu, Sim, Harcombe, Cox, Sarquis, Marziale, Harari, Freire, Harari, Monroy, Quintana, Rojas, Harris, Serra, Martinez, Delclos, Benavides, Carugno, Ferrario, Pesatori, Chatzi, Bitsios, Kogevinas, Oha, Freimann, Sadeghian, Peiris-John, Sathiakumar, Wickremasinghe, Yoshimura, Kelsall, Hoe, Urquhart, Derrett, McBride, Herbison, Gray and Vega2017). In multicultural health care settings, the various linguistic, social differences and acculturation issues add up in the consultation (De Marchi et al., Reference De Marchi, Tondo, Mittino, Bolamperti, Airoldi, Pizzamiglio and Cantello2018).

Pain and mental ill-health are common reasons for sick leave in younger persons, and especially among women and some immigrant groups (Soares and Jablonska, Reference Soares and Jablonska2004; Zelkowitz et al., Reference Zelkowitz, Schinazi, Katofsky, Saucier, Valenzuela, Westreich and Dayan2004). Immigrants and refugees represent a growing portion of patients in primary health care (Allison et al., Reference Allison, Symmons, Brammah, Haynes, Rogers, Roxby and Urwin2002; Brause et al., Reference Brause, Reutin, Razum and Schott2012). Both at group and individual levels they will explain ill-health in different ways, thus complicating the diagnostic process of, for example, non-European women with non-malignant widespread pain and long sickness absence (Aznar-Lou et al., Reference Aznar-Lou, Fernandez, Gil-GIirbau, Fajo-Pascual, Moreno-Peral, Penarrubia-Maria, Serrano-Blanco, Sanchez-Niubo, March-Pujol, Jove and Rubio-Valera2017; Nyen and Tveit, Reference Nyen and Tveit2018; Wang et al., Reference Wang, Mittendorfer-Rutz, Dorner, Pazarlis, Ropponen, Svedberg and Helgesson2019; Benz et al., Reference Benz, Lehmann, Brioschi, Elfering, Aeschlimann and Angst2019; Eid et al., Reference Eid, Prince, Edelman and Hagmann2019).

To summarise, it can be demanding to diagnose and manage depression and chronic pain in a multicultural context (Nicholl et al., Reference Nicholl, Smith, Cullen, Mackay, Evans, Anderson, Lyall, Fawns-Ritchie, McIntosh, Deary, Pell and Mair2015). Socio-cultural and linguistic diverse patient populations are common in primary health care around the world. Nevertheless, real-life studies of pain in such primary care settings are few and seldom include if or how professional interpreters influence patients’ presented pain.

This was the background for a study of a new primary care rehabilitation programme based on cross-cultural strategies in a multicultural district in Stockholm, Sweden. The overall aim of the programme was to improve a shared patient–doctor understanding regarding work-hindering pain by using cognitive-behavioural methods focusing on the patients’ fears and attitudes to pain (Löfvander et al., Reference Löfvander, Engström, Theander and Furhoff1997).

In this study we aimed to evaluate, by gender, the pain spread shown by the patients in their first encounter with doctors in the rehabilitation programme and the correlates to social and sick-leave data, interpreter support and clinical findings.

Methods

A real-life study was designed using a doctor’s perspective.

The study was performed in the context of a rehabilitation programme for younger middle-aged employed persons on paid sick leave from 1997 through 2007. The study setting was a primary health care centre in western Stockholm, Sweden, with 15 000 inhabitants (82% foreign born, 120 ethnic minorities, median age 29 years; unemployment rate about 10%). A majority was employed in the service sector and care. The rates of long-term sickness absenteeism and early retirement were high.

The programme in short

Eligible persons for the programme were the patients 20–45 years of age being on sick leave for at least six weeks for non-malignant disorders. Their doctors at the primary care centre informed the eligible patients of the programme and referred them to it if they consented to participate. Professional interpreters, free-of-charge, using word-to-word translation were available upon request from the patients.

Inclusion was done in consecutive order. Participation in the programme was voluntary.

The essential purpose of the rehabilitation programme was to reduce pain-related fears and to increase self-efficacy. The programme included an introduction consultation with the patient, an interpreter when requested by the patient and two doctors (male and female) taking turns as consultant and observer/secretary. The patient could not choose the sex of the consultant doctor. The four-week subsequent cognitive behavioural treatment consisted of four weekly sessions of patient – consultant doctor discussions about the patients’ ideas about their pain, and 20 daily 1-h general physical training supervised by the physiotherapist. No specific medical or physical treatment was given. The diagnosis of musculoskeletal lesions and depression followed the recommendations given by Swedish health care authorities.

Unemployed patients on long-term social welfare suffering from work-hindering pain were not eligible for this programme.

All three researchers, the two physicians of both sex and the physical therapist, were in principal blinded for all medical data except age and sex. During the first consultation, the physicians worked together, one acting as a consultant, the other as an observer, taking turns in these roles. The observer made field notes in a manual of interview data, clinical findings of somatic and mental ill-health, non-verbal communication of ill-health, and transferred the patients’ shown body parts onto a pain drawing. The observer doctor could also intervene with questions or other examination tests.

The consulting physician had no prior knowledge of the patient and could thus focus on the patient´s own version of his or her illness.

All assessments and diagnoses were made in co-operation between the two doctors. The most pathological alternative was chosen if they differed in their assessments.

Independent variables

Socio-demographic data included years of schooling, the number of children at home below 18 years of age, country (region) of birth, mother tongue, interpreter support, years since immigration, work and length of prior continuous sick leave. Sick-leave data were also provided by the local health insurance office.

Major depression was diagnosed using the criteria from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IIIR) (axis 1 criteria). The first two major criteria must be fulfilled (sadness and loss of interest). These feelings are well known also in a transcultural context and understood also by people who know only little Swedish (Löfvander et al., Reference Löfvander, Engström, Theander and Furhoff1997). Further questions about mood changes were asked when we observed sad eyes, and/or slow or agitated psycho-motor activity. Major depression was categorised as existing (yes) or not (no).

Levels of the severity of psychosocial stressors, for example, marital problems, financial strain, trauma, personal illness, children, work, housing and more (1 = mild through 6 = catastrophic) were assessed according to the DSM-IIIR axis 4 criteria.

Pain-related fears (yes; no) were also noted as a separate stressor (see Table 1) when connected to fears of future handicap, death, or another very unpleasant feeling from pain as found from interviews about concepts of pain (Löfvander et al., Reference Löfvander, Lindström and Masich2007).

We tested for likely nociceptive pain sources from muscular insertion structures at joint-near locations, for example, spine, shoulders, hips (labelled pain sites). A pain site was considered verified when the pain was elicited twice at the same location from isometric muscle contractions against applied resistance (Löfvander et al., Reference Löfvander, Engström, Theander and Furhoff1997). The pain sites were noted on a separate sketched human body manual and counted at evaluation. The physiotherapist performed her examination the subsequent day to confirm/add/negate the findings above.

Symptoms and signs of neuropathic pain were also considered. The physical examination included auscultation of heart and lungs, blood pressure and common laboratory tests of blood and urine. Medical records were examined for additional morbidity.

Dependent variable

All patients, in the upright position wearing underwear, pointed out on their bodies where they felt pain. These body parts were indicated by the observer doctor on the frontal and dorsal views of an empty body manikin and shown to the patient to be approved. The procedure was the same for all patients with respect to the many illiterate patients who did not understand how to use pens, or how to draw. The pain drawings had no axial partitions and were, when evaluated, divided into nine fields each on the frontal and dorsal views. The total number was 18 pain drawing fields (PDFs) consisting of legs and arms, hips, lower back, thoracic back, shoulders, neck-skull on the back side, and in front the face, shoulders, arms, chest, abdomen, lower abdomen, legs. Adjacent pain fields were counted when covered to a minimum of 25% so as to avoid overestimating the dependent variable.

Statistics

Analyses were performed by gender. Median values with inter-quartile ranges (IQR) were calculated for ordinal and interval data. Numbers and frequencies were calculated for category data. Differences between groups were analysed by chi-square tests (categorical data) or Mann–Whitney U-tests (ordinal and interval data. The dependent variable was the number of PDFs. The independent variables were age 20 through 45 years; number of children at home < 18 years; education as years in school; prior continuous sick leave 1.5–6 months (ref.), 6.1–<12 months (intermediate) or > 12 months (prolonged); European (ref.) and non-European; interpreter: no (ref.) or yes; major depression: no (ref.) or yes; severity of psychosocial stressors 1 (none) through 6 (catastrophic); pain-related fears no (ref.) or yes; number of pain sites 0–18.

We calculated the unstandardised coefficients (B) with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) for the independent variables as predicting the number of PDFs by using multiple variable linear regression calculation in full models. Model summaries were presented as adjusted R square values by gender.

A two-sided P-value < 0.05 was considered as statistically significant. SPSS statistics software version 24.0 was used for the statistic calculations.

Ethical considerations

The ethical committee of Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, approved the study (D-no 00-166).

The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional guidelines on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008.

Findings

There were 250 eligible patients. Fifteen of them abstained. Thus 235 (94%) patients (138 women and 97 men) entered the programme (median age 38 years), 82% of them were of non-European birth, mostly from Turkey (women) or Middle East (men) (see Table 1). A minority were born in Southern Europe and a few in Northern Europe (Finland, Poland and England), while six patients were Swedish-born. All were employed, mostly in service and child- or health care. The median residence time was 14 years (range 10–25 years). Yet many patients, especially women, wanted a professional interpreter. In total, one-third of the patients had difficulties to read and write in their mother tongue.

Only a few (9%) had additional medical conditions, for example, mild anaemia, asthma or diabetes, non-significant, between sub-groups. Two men had experienced major traumas. One man had alcohol problems. Most patients used mild analgesics daily, often in small doses. No one reported using morphine-related or psychotropic drugs. No patient had a personality disorder or severe depression, irritable bowel, bladder syndrome, migraine or neuropathic pain.

Common complaints comprised non-radiating backache constraining their ability to work. This pain could include the dorsal pain fields (neck, thoracic and lumbar regions, hips and shoulders) but also a wider spread of pain out to the chest, shoulders, lower abdomen, upper arms or legs. The pain was of superficial character without neuropathic dimensions.

Table 1 shows the descriptive values of the dependent variable and the independent variables for women and men separately. The women had more PDFs than the men but varied much in number: women in median 5 (IQR 4–8) versus men in median 3 (IQR 2–5), P < 0.001). They also had significantly more children, shorter education and had more often interpreter support compared to the men. Furthermore, they had more often a major depression (51% versus 32% men). Both women and men were exposed to at least a moderate severity of psychosocial stressors in which pain-related fears were particularly common (81%).

Table 1. Characteristics of the study sample by gender

md = median; IQR = inter-quartile range.

*P < 0.05, ** P < 0.01, *** P < 0.001 between women and men.

a Frontal and dorsal pain drawings (nine fields each).

b Fifty-six from Turkey, 28 from the Middle East.

c Criteria from axis I and axis IV of DSM-III-R.

d Reproducible pain at joint-near structures.

Clinical findings show that pain sites were significantly more common among women (md 3; IQR 2–5) than men (md 2; IQR 1–3), P = 0.001).

Table 2 shows the full model of the multivariable linear regression models for PDFs, by gender. For men, the regression calculations revealed that increasing numbers of PDFs were significantly associated only with increasing numbers of pain sources (B 0.871; P < 0.001). For women, this association was weaker (B 0.364, P < 0.001) having significant values also for age (B 0.103) and sick leave > one year (B 0.767, P = 0.010), and, notably, also a negative predicting value for interpreter support (B −1.198, P < 0.043). Furthermore, women with many children and women of non-European birth had a non-significant trend for higher PDFs. Men with depression had a non-significant trend for higher PDFs.

Table 2. Multivariable linear regression in full models as predicting pain drawing fields

Adjusted R-square 0.250 full model for women.

Adjusted R-square 0.391 full model for men.

Significant values in bold.

Model summaries for PDFs were low for the women, Adj. R 2 0.250, and higher for the men, Adj. R 2 0.391.

Discussion

The principal finding was that patients’ pain drawings were mainly associated with the doctors’ somatic findings of pain sites, but this association varied much among the women. The non-European women did not have significantly more PDFs than the other women, and the women, but not the men, with an interpreter support had significantly fewer PDF fields.

What is new?

To the best of our knowledge, this is an original publication using cross-culturally adapted procedures for evaluating foreign-born patients on sick leave and the influence of interpreter support on their pain reports and their doctors’ diagnostic findings.

Strengths and limitations

This study had a real-life design and a good external validity but lowered by its cultural and historical frame. Another strength was the homogeneity of this patient sample with persons who shared experiences of migration, the acculturation process, living conditions and chronic pain, and this despite their diverse socio-cultural backgrounds. Most importantly, liberal use was made of professional interpreters, which ensured the trustworthiness of the interview data collected. A limitation is the rather small sample size of patients framed of a rehabilitation programme at a single primary care centre.

Conclusions regarding cause and effect cannot be drawn from this cross-sectional study. A transfer of our results is further limited to younger employed immigrant persons having had a doctor certificate for paid sick leave due to incapacity to work. The results may be possible to transfer to similar multicultural primary care settings where health care professionals meet challenges in cross-cultural medical consultations for pain, depression, distress and sick leave.

Discussion of methods

Multimodal rehabilitation programmes in primary care tend to exclude women and immigrants because of their assumed poor prognosis (Stenberg et al., Reference Stenberg, Pietilä Holmner, Stålnacke and Enthoven2016). In contrast, our study cohort included all eligible patients regardless of sex and socio-cultural background.

Understanding the patients’ complaints is essential in medical consultations (Scheermesser et al., Reference Scheermesser, Bachmann, Schamann, Oesch and Kool2012) but difficult when the consultations include assessments of functional disability and sickness certification in younger persons with pain and few ‘objective’ signs (Fatahi et al., Reference Fatahi, Mattsson, Hasanpoor and Skott2005; Roberts et al., Reference Roberts, Moss, Wass, Sarangi and Jones2005; Arrelöv et al., Reference Arrelöv, Alexanderson, Hagberg, Löfgren, Nilsson and Ponzer2007; Kedzia et al., Reference Kedzia, Kunz, Zeller, Rosemann, Frey, Sommer, Herzig, Alexanderson and De Boer2015). Reported back and/or shoulder aches or widespread pain is particularly common among immigrants according to Andersson et al. (Reference Andersson, Ejlertsson, Leden and Rosenberg1996) and Gerdle et al. (Reference Gerdle, Björk, Coster, Henriksson, Henriksson and Bengtsson2008). They are often also exposed to excess working place strains and hazards (Engkvist et al., Reference Engkvist, Hjelm, Hagberg, Menckel and Ekenvall2000; Kamaleri et al., Reference Kamaleri, Natvig, Ihlebaek and Bruusgaard2009; Overland et al., Reference Overland, Harvey, Knudsen, Mykletun and Hotopf2012). Our study tried to address these issues by designing a real-life study focusing on diagnostic findings and language support in younger immigrant patients with non-malignant pain being certified sick from work for lengthy periods.

Various linguistic, cultural and educational inequalities had to be overcome in this study. To secure a valid and reliable data collection we had Swedish doctors of both sex, had sign-language as a standard to indicate pain spread on the body, provided free availability to professional interpreters regardless of fluency in Swedish, but also encouraged the use of basic Swedish words. The DSM criteria for evaluating depressive symptoms have proved both valid and reliable across cultures (DSM-IIIR). The two major symptoms were nearly always uncomplicated to ask for in an everyday consultation manner whether using basic Swedish or via an interpreter.

Discussion of results

Here, presented pain and somatic findings varied more among the women than they did among the men. Distress and depression did not sufficiently account for this.

Most patients presented pain in the back and shoulder region. This backside pain was mainly understood from a doctor’s perspective as being of somatic origin also in the non-European women. Our patients’ focus on pain in the back contrast to the principally frontal pain in ‘half-body pain’ (Bäärnhielm and Ekblad, Reference Bäärnhielm and Ekblad2000; Löfvander et al., Reference Löfvander, Lindström and Masich2007), or the widespread ‘overall’ pain described by women and suggested to be related to distress, evaluation of stimuli, pain coping and/or hormonal effects (Bergman, Reference Bergman2005; Kindler et al., Reference Kindler, Valencia, Fillingim and George2011; Tsay et al., Reference Tsay, Allen, Proske and Giummarra2015).

An encouraging assumption from the result here is that interpreter support by professionals seems to have been of a substantial help for patients to verbalise their pain complaints, thus enabling a patient–doctor understanding of special importance for patients with little education, widespread pain and more severe mental ill-health (Fatahi et al., Reference Fatahi, Mattsson, Hasanpoor and Skott2005; Fryer et al., Reference Fryer, Mackintosh, Stanley and Crichton2012; Falla et al., Reference Falla, Peolsson, Peterson, Ludvigsson, Soldini, Schneebeli and Barbero2016).

Persons with fibromyalgia tended to have a higher psychosocial burden compared with those having widespread pain only (Gerhardt et al., Reference Gerhardt, Eich, Treede and Tesarz2017). Both conditions were common among immigrants (Bergman, Reference Bergman2005). Only one patient here had fibromyalgia while it was more common that patients had an un-specific widespread pain and depression resembling the criteria for somatoform (idiopathic) pain syndrome (DSM-III-R).

A perceived widespread pain might shrink by time (Papageorgiou et al., Reference Papageorgiou, Silman and MacFarlane2002). Contrasting to this are the many studies describing extended sick-leave periods with disability benefits to associate with more outspread pain possibly by inactivity, but also by many ‘learning’ occasions when consulting various medical professionals (Kindler et al., Reference Kindler, Jones, Perrin and Bennet2010; Pienimäki et al., Reference Pienimäki, Siir and Vanharanta2011; Gerhardt et al., Reference Gerhardt, Hartmann, Blumenstiel, Tesarz and Eich2014; Falla et al., Reference Falla, Peolsson, Peterson, Ludvigsson, Soldini, Schneebeli and Barbero2016). With this in mind, we noted that no unemployed immigrant patient presented outspread pain despite having long-term disabling pain but without a doctor sickness certificate (personal communication from the parallel rehabilitation programme).

Here, increasing PDFs did not associate with major depression or more severe stress among women, with a question mark for the men. This corresponds with findings among Nordic citizens, of pain as not linked to depressive symptoms alone (Kamaleri et al., Reference Kamaleri, Natvig, Ihlebaek and Bruusgaard2009; Kindler et al., Reference Kindler, Jones, Perrin and Bennet2010). In contrast, other authors found widespread pain to be more common in distressed, traumatised or mentally ill persons (McBeth et al., Reference McBeth, MacFarlane, Hunt and Silman2001). Also learning and iatrogenic factors, secondary gains, illness behaviours and family roles may contribute for the pain to extend into multiple fields (Nordeman et al., Reference Nordeman, Gunnarsson and Mannerkorpi2012; Overland et al., Reference Overland, Harvey, Knudsen, Mykletun and Hotopf2012; Scheermesser et al., Reference Scheermesser, Bachmann, Schamann, Oesch and Kool2012). Other contributing factors to pain spread might be a disturbed central pain modulation, hypersensitivity and awareness of bodily sensations (Harkness et al., Reference Harkness, MacFarlane, Silman and McBeth2005; Kindler et al., Reference Kindler, Jones, Perrin and Bennet2010; Schliessbach et al., Reference Schliessbach, Siegenthaler, Streitberger, Eichenberger, Nuesch, Juni, Arendt-Nielsen and Curatolo2013; Gruszka et al., Reference Gruszka, Schaan, Adolph, Panne-Farre´, Benke, Schneider and Hechlerb2018). Interestingly, a low alcohol intake seems to relate to a wider spread of pain (Arvidsson et al., Reference Arvidsson, Arvidsson, Fridlund and Bergman2008). To compare, most of our patients had manual jobs and pain-related fears, but no joint disorders, and were not hypersensitive to touch but they reported a low or very low consumption of alcohol. Furthermore, the additional somatic complaints to pain were few here, in contrast to the features of widespread pain in medically unexplained syndromes (Burton, Reference Burton2003; Nordeman et al., Reference Nordeman, Gunnarsson and Mannerkorpi2012).

Implications for clinical care

Professional interpreters may facilitate to create a patient-doctor bridge which could be of special importance for women with little formal education. Such a strategy may reduce the gap between immigrant patients´ described pain and diagnostic findings, thus making it easier to establish diagnoses, assess functional disability and find treatment strategies for return to work. Our results can be valid also today since mental and musculo-skeletal disorders are still major reasons for disability among younger persons, and medical professionals still need helping strategies in cross-cultural medical encounters.

Future studies

Further studies are warranted regarding the role of professional interpreters in medical consultations regarding patients with pain and work disability. Such study designs require funding bodies to recognise the importance of including linguistically diverse people in the participant samples.

Conclusion

The patients indicated a spread of pain that was mainly associated with diagnostic findings of pain sites with larger variations among the women. Non-European women did not differ from this pattern. Women supported by professional interpreters indicated fewer pain fields. On the whole, the findings imply potential counselling problems in multicultural health care regarding cause, treatment and in the sick-leave issuing process. Further research and development studies are warranted in multicultural primary care settings for younger people with chronic pain and disability.

Acknowledgements

We thank the primary health care centre personnel and patients who participated in this project. We thank the general practitioner Alf Engström for the great help in gathering data and for inspiration. We thank Philippe Wagner for statistical help.

Authors’ contribution

The author alone is responsible for the conceptualisation, the content and writing of this article. M.L. designed the study and collected and analysed the initial data together with Alf Engström, MD.

Financial Support

The County Council of Stockholm, Sweden, granted this study.

Conflicts of Interest

The Stockholm County Council funded the study but played no role in its design, the collection, analysis and interpretation of data, the writing of the manuscript or the decision to submit the manuscript for publication. The author reports no conflict of interest.

Ethical Standards

The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional guidelines on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008.

References

Allison, TR, Symmons, DP, Brammah, T, Haynes, P, Rogers, A, Roxby, M and Urwin, M (2002) Musculoskeletal pain is more generalised among people from ethnic minorities than among white people in Greater Manchester. Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases 61, 151156.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Andersson, HI, Ejlertsson, G, Leden, I and Rosenberg, C (1996) Characteristics of subjects with chronic pain, in relation to local and widespread pain report. A prospective study of symptoms, clinical findings and blood tests in subgroups of a geographically defined population. Scandinavian Journal of Rheumatology 25, 146154.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Arrelöv, B, Alexanderson, K, Hagberg, J, Löfgren, A, Nilsson, G and Ponzer, S (2007) Dealing with sickness certification – a survey of problems and strategies among general practitioners and orthopaedic surgeons. BMC Public Health 7, 273.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Arvidsson, S, Arvidsson, B, Fridlund, B and Bergman, S (2008) Health predicting factors in a general population over an eight-year period in subjects with and without chronic musculoskeletal pain. Health & Quality of Life Outcomes 6, 98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aznar-Lou, I, Fernandez, A, Gil-GIirbau, M, Fajo-Pascual, M, Moreno-Peral, P, Penarrubia-Maria, MT, Serrano-Blanco, A, Sanchez-Niubo, A, March-Pujol, MA, Jove, AM and Rubio-Valera, M (2017) Initial medication non-adherence: prevalence and predictive factors in a cohort of 1.6 million primary care patients. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology 83, 13281340.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bäärnhielm, S and Ekblad, S (2000) Turkish migrant women encountering health care in Stockholm: a qualitative study of somatization and illness meaning. Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry 24, 431452.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Benz, T, Lehmann, S, Brioschi, R, Elfering, A, Aeschlimann, A and Angst, F (2019) Comparison of short- and mid-term outcomes of Italian- and German-speaking patients after an interdisciplinary pain management programme in Switzerland: a prospective cohort study. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine 51, 127135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bergman, S (2005) Psychosocial aspects of chronic widespread pain and fibromyalgia. Disability and Rehabilitation 27, 675683.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Brause, M, Reutin, B, Razum, O and Schott, T (2012) Rehabilitation results of Turkish immigrants – an analysis of routine data from the Rhineland and Westfalia Pension Insurance. Rehabilitation (Stuttg) 51, 282288. (Article in German).Google ScholarPubMed
Burton, C (2003) Beyond somatisation: a review of the understanding and treatment of medically unexplained physical symptoms (MUPS). British Journal of General Practice 53, 231239.Google Scholar
Coggon, D, Ntani, G, Walker-Bone, K, Palmer, KT, Felli, VE, Harari, R, Barrero, LH, Felknor, SA, Gimeno, D, Cattrell, A, Vargas-Prada, S, BonziniI, M, Solidaki, E, Merisalu, E, Habib, RR, Sadeghian, F, Kadir, MM, Warnakulasuriya, SSP, Matsudaira, K, Nyantumbu, B, Sim, MR, Harcombe, H, Cox, K, Sarquis, LMM, Marziale, MH, Harari, F, Freire, R, Harari, N, Monroy, MV, Quintana, LA, Rojas, M, Harris, EC, Serra, C, Martinez, JM, Delclos, G, Benavides, FG, Carugno, M, Ferrario, MM, Pesatori, AC, Chatzi, L, Bitsios, P, Kogevinas, M, Oha, K, Freimann, T, Sadeghian, A, Peiris-John, RJ, Sathiakumar, N, Wickremasinghe, AR, Yoshimura, N, Kelsall, HL, Hoe, VCW, Urquhart, DM, Derrett, S, McBride, D, Herbison, P, Gray, A and Vega, EJS (2017) Epidemiological differences between localized and nonlocalized low back pain. Spine (Phila Pa 1976) 42, 740747.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
De Marchi, F, Tondo, G, Mittino, D, Bolamperti, L, Airoldi, C, Pizzamiglio, C and Cantello, R (2018) Headache in immigrant patients: similarities and differences with Italian population. Neurological Sciences 39, 749752.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Eid, D, Prince, JM, Edelman, MC and Hagmann, SHF (2019) An immigrant teen from Bangladesh with fever, abdominal pain, and ascites: a diagnostic challenge. Travel Medicine and Infectious Diseases, doi: 10.1016/j.tmaid.2019.01.015 [Epub ahead of print].CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Engkvist, IL, Hjelm, EW, Hagberg, M, Menckel, E and Ekenvall, L (2000) Risk indicators for reported over-exertion back injuries among female nursing personnel. Epidemiology 11, 519522.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Falla, D, Peolsson, A, Peterson, G, Ludvigsson, ML, Soldini, E, Schneebeli, A and Barbero, M (2016) Perceived pain extent is associated with disability, depression and self-efficacy in individuals with whiplash-associated disorders. European Journal of Pain 20, 14901501.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fatahi, N, Mattsson, B, Hasanpoor, J and Skott, C (2005) Interpreters’ experiences of general practitioner-patient encounters. Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care 23, 159163.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fryer, C, Mackintosh, S, Stanley, M and Crichton, J (2012) Qualitative studies using in-depth interviews with older people from multiple language groups: a methodological systematic review. Journal of Advanced Nursing 68, 2235.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gerdle, B, Björk, J, Coster, L, Henriksson, K, Henriksson, C and Bengtsson, A (2008) Prevalence of widespread pain and associations with work status: a population study. BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders 9, 102.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gerhardt, A, Eich, W, Treede, RD and Tesarz, J (2017) Conditioned pain modulation in patients with nonspecific chronic back pain with chronic local pain, chronic widespread pain, and fibromyalgia. Pain 158, 430439.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gerhardt, A, Hartmann, M, Blumenstiel, K, Tesarz, J and Eich, W (2014) The prevalence rate and the role of the spatial extent of pain in nonspecific chronic back pain – a population-based study in the south-west of Germany. Pain Medicine 15, 12001210.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gruszka, P, Schaan, L, Adolph, D, Panne-Farre´, CA, Benke, C, Schneider, S and Hechlerb, T (2018) Defence response mobilization in response to provocation or imagery of interoceptive sensations in adolescents with chronic pain: a study protocol. PAIN Reports 3, e680. doi: 10.1097/PR9.0000000000000680 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harkness, EF, MacFarlane, GJ, Silman, AJ and McBeth, J (2005) Is musculoskeletal pain more common now than 40 years ago?: two population-based cross-sectional studies. Rheumatology (Oxford), 44, 890895.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kamaleri, Y, Natvig, B, Ihlebaek, CM and Bruusgaard, D (2009) Does the number of musculoskeletal pain sites predict work disability? A 14-year prospective study. European Journal of Pain 13, 426430.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kedzia, S, Kunz, R, Zeller, A, Rosemann, T, Frey, P, Sommer, J, Herzig, L, Alexanderson, K and De Boer, WE (2015) Sickness certification in primary care: a survey on views and practices among Swiss physicians. Swiss Medical Weekly 145, 14201.Google ScholarPubMed
Kindler, LL, Jones, KD, Perrin, N and Bennet, RM (2010) Risk factors predicting the development of widespread pain from chronic back or neck pain. The Journal of Pain 11, 13201328.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kindler, LL, Valencia, C, Fillingim, RB and George, SZ (2011) Sex differences in experimental and clinical pain sensitivity for patients with shoulder pain. European Journal of Pain 15, 118123.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ljungquist, T, Hinas, E, Nilsson, GH, Gustavsson, C, Arrelöv, B and Alexanderson, K (2015) Problems with sickness certification tasks: experiences from physicians in different clinical settings. A cross-sectional nationwide study in Sweden. BMC Health Services Research 15, 321.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Löfvander, M, Engström, A, Theander, H and Furhoff, AK (1997) Rehabilitation of young immigrants in primary care. A comparison between two treatment models. Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care 15, 123128.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Löfvander, M, Lindström, MA and Masich, V (2007) Pain drawings and concepts of pain among patients with ‘half-body’ complaints. Patient Education and Counseling 66, 353360.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McBeth, J, MacFarlane, GJ, Hunt, IM and Silman, AJ (2001) Risk factors for persistent chronic widespread pain: a community-based study. Rheumatology (Oxford) 40, 95101.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nicholl, BI, Smith, DJ, Cullen, B, Mackay, D, Evans, J, Anderson, J, Lyall, DM, Fawns-Ritchie, C, McIntosh, AM, Deary, IJ, Pell, JP and Mair, FS (2015) Ethnic differences in the association between depression and chronic pain: cross sectional results from UK Biobank. BMC Family Practice 6, 128.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nordeman, L, Gunnarsson, R and Mannerkorpi, K (2012) Prevalence and characteristics of widespread pain in female primary health care patients with chronic low back pain. Clinical Journal of Pain 28, 6572.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nyen, S and Tveit, B (2018) Symptoms without disease: exploring experiences of non-Western immigrant women living with chronic pain. Health Care for Women International 39, 322342.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Overland, S, Harvey, SB, Knudsen, AK, Mykletun, A and Hotopf, M (2012) Widespread pain and medically certified disability pension in the Hordaland Health Study. European Journal of Pain 16, 611620.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Papageorgiou, AC, Silman, AJ and MacFarlane, GJ (2002) Chronic widespread pain in the population: a seven year follow up study. Annals of the Rheumatological Diseases 61, 10711074.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pienimäki, T, Siir, P and Vanharanta, H (2011) Widespread pain in chronic epicondylitis. European Journal of Pain 15, 921927.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roberts, C, Moss, B, Wass, V, Sarangi, S and Jones, R (2005) Misunderstandings: a qualitative study of primary care consultations in multilingual settings, and educational implications. Medical Education 39, 465475.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Scheermesser, M, Bachmann, S, Schamann, A, Oesch, P and Kool, J (2012) A qualitative study on the role of cultural background in patients’ perspectives on rehabilitation. BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders 13, 5.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schliessbach, J, Siegenthaler, A, Streitberger, K, Eichenberger, U, Nuesch, E, Juni, P, Arendt-Nielsen, L and Curatolo, M (2013) The prevalence of widespread central hypersensitivity in chronic pain patients. European Journal of Pain 17, 15021510.Google ScholarPubMed
Soares, JJ and Jablonska, B (2004) Psychosocial experiences among primary care patients with and without musculoskeletal pain. European Journal of Pain 8, 7989.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stenberg, G, Pietilä Holmner, E, Stålnacke, BM and Enthoven, P (2016) Healthcare professional experiences with patients who participate in multimodal pain rehabilitation in primary care – a qualitative study. Disability and Rehabilitation 38, 110.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tsay, A, Allen, TJ, Proske, U and Giummarra, MJ (2015) Sensing the body in chronic pain: a review of psychophysical studies implicating altered body representation. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews 52, 221232.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wainwright, E, Wainwright, D, Keogh, E and Eccleston, C (2015) The social negotiation of fitness for work: tensions in doctor-patient relationships over medical certification of chronic pain. Health (London) 19, 1733. doi: 10.1177/1363459314530738.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wang, M, Mittendorfer-Rutz, E, Dorner, TE, Pazarlis, KA, Ropponen, A, Svedberg, P and Helgesson, M (2019) Determinants of work disability following lumbar spine decompression surgery. Scandinavian Journal of Public Health 47, 282292. doi: 10.1177/1403494818785055.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wynne-Jones, G, Mallen, CD, Main, CJ and Dunn, KM (2010) What do GPs feel about sickness certification? A systematic search and narrative review. Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care 28, 6775.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zelkowitz, P, Schinazi, J, Katofsky, L, Saucier, JF, Valenzuela, M, Westreich, R and Dayan, J (2004) Factors associated with depression in pregnant immigrant women. Transcultural Psychiatry 41, 445464.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1. Characteristics of the study sample by gender

Figure 1

Table 2. Multivariable linear regression in full models as predicting pain drawing fields