Persistent Pain Worsens Physical Function and Mental Health in Seniors
/By Pat Anson, PNN Editor
Having persistent pain in your senior years is very common and contributes to declines in physical function and mental health, according to large new study that calls for more proactive treatment of pain in older adults.
“The findings from this study point to the importance of access to effective treatment for persistent pain in older adults and the need for additional research in chronic pain to optimize quality of life,” said lead author Christine Ritchie, MD, Director of the Mongan Institute Center for Aging and Serious Illness at Massachusetts General Hospital.
Ritchie and her colleagues analyzed health data for nearly 5,600 Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 and older who participated in the National Health Aging Trends Study from 2011 to 2019. Nearly 39% of participants reported having “persistent pain” and almost 28% had “intermittent pain.” Only about a third of older adults (33.5%) reported having no “bothersome pain.”
Researchers found that seniors with persistent pain were more likely to report depression and anxiety, and to have three or more comorbid conditions such as a heart attack, stroke or cancer than those with intermittent or no pain. They were also more likely to have lower scores for mood and self-care activities such as eating, hygiene and dressing.
Perhaps the only good news is that differences were not found in cognitive impairment or dementia between those with and without persistent pain.
“This study is the first to include a representative sample of older Americans that demonstrates meaningful declines in physical function and well-being among those with persistent pain,” researchers reported in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
“Given the high prevalence of persistent pain and its negative effects on both function and well-being, domains of the lived experience highly valued by older adults, it is incumbent on clinicians to prioritize strategies to effectively address their persistent pain.”
The researchers said many older adults lack access to effective nonpharmacological therapies and receive little guidance from primary care physicians about pain treatments.
Participants with persistent pain were more likely to be female, low-income, have limited education, and to be living alone – findings that mirror those of a 2020 study that found less-educated, working class Americans had higher rates of pain, social isolation, drug abuse, disability and suicide.
A recent study in the UK found that having chronic pain in middle age significantly raises the chances of having pain and poor overall health in your senior years.