The burdens attributable to primary headache disorders in children and adolescents in Iran: estimates from a schools-based study

May 26, 2024The journal of headache and pain

Impact of common headaches on children and teens in Iran based on a school study

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Abstract

The mean headache frequency among children and adolescents in Iran was 3.9 days per 4 weeks.

  • Headache disorders are prevalent in children (aged 6-11 years) and adolescents (aged 12-17) in Iran, with migraine affecting 25.2% and tension-type headache affecting 12.7%.
  • The average duration of headaches was reported as 1.8 hours.
  • For (pMOH), the mean frequency was significantly higher, at 4.3 days lost from school, which is eleven-fold greater than the overall average.
  • Symptomatic medication was utilized on an average of 1.6 days per 4 weeks.
  • Parental work absenteeism due to children's headaches occurred in 7.9% of cases.

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Key numbers

25.2%
Headache Prevalence
Proportion of children affected by migraine.
4.3 days/4 weeks
Lost School Time for
Average days lost from school for pupils with .
7.9%
Parental Work Loss
Proportion of parents missing work due to children's headaches.

Full Text

What this is

  • This research estimates the burden of primary headache disorders among children and adolescents in Iran.
  • Using a cross-sectional survey of 3,244 students, it evaluates headache prevalence and its impact on daily life.
  • Findings reveal significant educational and emotional burdens, particularly for those with medication-overuse headaches.

Essence

  • Headache disorders are prevalent among Iranian children and adolescents, with substantial burdens on education and quality of life, especially for those with medication-overuse headaches.

Key takeaways

  • Headache disorders affect 40.3% of children and 59.7% of adolescents, with migraine at 25.2% prevalence. This indicates a widespread issue among young populations.
  • Lost school time averaged 0.4 days/4 weeks overall, but was 4.3 days (22%) for those with , highlighting severe educational impacts.
  • 7.9% of parents missed work due to their children's headaches, indicating a broader familial impact that extends beyond the affected individuals.

Caveats

  • The study relies on self-reported data, which may introduce recall bias and affect the accuracy of headache frequency and impact assessments.
  • The cross-sectional design limits causal inferences about the relationship between headache disorders and their attributed burdens.

Definitions

  • probable medication-overuse headache (pMOH): Headache occurring on ≥ 15 days/month associated with overuse of symptomatic medication.
  • undifferentiated headache (UdH): Mild headache of short duration (< 1 hour) not meeting criteria for other headache types.

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