J Headache Pain (2012) 13:543550 DOI 10.1007/s10194-012-0474-1
ORIGINAL
The burden of headache disorders in India: methodology and questionnaire validation for a community-based survey in Karnataka State
Girish N. Rao Girish B. Kulkarni Gopalkrishna Gururaj
Kavita Rajesh D. Kumaraswamy Subbakrishna
Timothy J. Steiner Lars J. Stovner
Received: 2 June 2012 / Accepted: 2 August 2012 / Published online: 22 August 2012 The Author(s) 2012. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com
Abstract Primary headache disorders are a major public-health problem globally and, possibly more so, in low- and middle-income countries. No methodologically sound studies of prevalence and burden of headache in the adult Indian population have been published previously. The present study was a door-to-door cold-calling survey in urban and rural areas in and around Bangalore, Karnataka State. From 2,714 households contacted, 2,514 biologically unrelated individuals were eligible for the survey and 2,329(92.9 %) participated (1,103 [48 %] rural; 1,226 [52 %] urban; 1,141 [49 %] male; 1,188 [51 %] female; mean age38.0 years). The focus was on primary headache (migraine and tension-type headache [TTH]) and medication-overuse
headache. A structured questionnaire administered by trained lay interviewers was the instrument both for diagnosis (algorithmically determined from responses) and burden estimation. The screening question enquired into headache in the last year. The validation study compared questionnaire-based diagnoses with those obtained soon after through personal interview by a neurologist in a random sub-sample of participants (n = 381; 16 %). It showed high values ([80 %) for sensitivity, specicity and predictive values for any headache, and for specicity and negative predictive value for migraine and TTH. Kappa values for diagnostic agreement were good for any headache (0.69 [95 % CI 0.610.76]), moderate (0.46[0.350.56]) for migraine and fair (0.39 [0.290.49]) for TTH.The survey methodology, including identication of and access to participants, proved feasible. The questionnaire proved effective in the survey population. The study will give reliable estimates of the prevalence and burden of headache, and of migraine and TTH specically, in urban and rural Karnataka.
Keywords Primary headache disorders Migraine
Tension-type headache Epidemiology
Burden of disease Methodology Survey
Validation Global Campaign against Headache India
Introduction
Sound and reliable epidemiological information is the essential basis of health-care needs assessment, of planning and organizing health-care services and of resource allocation [1].
In a world where resources are limited, headache disorders are unrecognised as a public-health priority and fare
G. N. Rao G. Gururaj (&) K. Rajesh
Department of Epidemiology, National Institute of Mental Health and NeuroSciences, Bangalore 560-029, India e-mail: [email protected]
G. B. KulkarniDepartment of Neurology, National Institute of Mental Health and NeuroSciences, Bangalore 560-029, India
D. K. SubbakrishnaDepartment of Bio-Statistics, National Institute of Mental Health and NeuroSciences, Bangalore 560-029, India
T. J. Steiner L. J. Stovner
Department of Neuroscience, Imperial College London, London, UK
T. J. SteinerDepartment of Neuroscience, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway
L. J. StovnerNorwegian National Headache Centre,St. Olavs University Hospital, Trondheim, Norway
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badly in the queue for resource allocation, despite clear evidence of the ill-health, disability and economic burdens they impose [2, 3]. There is evidence that this is no less so in low- and middle-income (LAMI) countries [2], while being exacerbated by the general lack of resources. However, reliable population-based data, sufcient to support the argument for change, are limited or not available in these countries [4]. Much information from other parts of the world is difcult to interpret, and comparisons or extrapolations are limited by methodological variations in study design, in sampling (method, representativeness and sample size), in accessing and engaging participants (personal interview, telephone or postal survey), in phrasing the screening and diagnostic questions, in timeframe of headache (life-time, 1 year, 3 months, etc.) and in the specic diagnoses considered [5, 6]. Consequently, reported prevalence rates show substantial variation [6]. Further, most such information comes from developed countries [2, 4, 6].
From an Indian perspective, few studies describe the epidemiology of headache disorders. Previously, these disorders have been investigated only within larger neuroepidemiological surveys that have neither focused on headache nor used internationally accepted criteria for headache diagnoses [7]. This is the background for the present population-based study in the south Indian state of Karnataka, performed with support from the nongovernmental organization Lifting The Burden as a project within the Global Campaign against Headache [8]. The study was designed to overcome the limitations of previous Indian studies, and with the principal objective of estimating the prevalence and burden of the headache disorders of public-health importance (migraine, tension-type headache [TTH] and medication-overuse headache [MOH]) in a representative sample of the adult general population. The methodology, procedures and steps of the study, and the results of the diagnostic questionnaire validation, are presented in this report.
Methodology
Ethics
The Institutional Ethics Committee of National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences (NIMHANS), Bangalore, India approved the study protocol. Informed consent was obtained from participants before interviews commenced. In addition, to obtain wide acceptance of the study, a brief overview of the study and intended interviews, and their purpose and objectives, were presented to local community leaders, and their queries answered and doubts claried.
Population of interest
The adult population between 18 and 65 years in both urban and rural Bangalore was the population identied for the study. Institutional households (paying-guest accommodation, hostels, etc.) and immigrants (dened as staying for \6 months in the household and locality) were excluded, as were bachelor households (those containing two or more bachelors belonging to different families staying together, whether or not sharing the preparation or partaking of food) on the basis that they were not permanent residents. Those not conversant with the local language (Kannada) were also excluded.
Study design
The study was a cross-sectional survey, using cluster sampling among urban and rural populations representative of the population of Karnataka State.
Sample size
Applying an expected prevalence of headache of 35 %, based on review of previous studies [6], and with 95 % condence and 10 % relative error margins, the minimum sample requirement was 1,000 biologically unrelated individuals from each (urban and rural) stratum.
Study area
The study was undertaken in both urban and rural areas of Bangalore. For the urban component, after excluding predominantly commercial areas within Bangalore city, specic geographical areas with relatively stable population consisting of a mix of upper, middle and lower classes were listed and one area (Kemepegowdanagara [http://g.co/maps/ungmu
Web End =http://g.co/maps/ http://g.co/maps/ungmu
Web End =ungmu ]) was randomly selected. For the rural component, one revenue subdivision (taluka) in Bangalore rural district was randomly chosen and, from a list of villages therein obtained from Census 2001 data, two villages (Uyamballi and Doddaaladahalli [http://g.co/maps/9gbnt
Web End =http://g.co/maps/9gbnt ]), located almost 110 km from Bangalore city and with 500 and 800 households respectively, were randomly selected.
Sampling
An individual household (dened as a group of people living together and sharing a kitchen) was considered as the Primary Sampling Unit. Local residential maps were developed to identify area boundaries and household distribution, and all households then given unique numbers. Uninhabited or abandoned houses, institutional households and commercial establishments were excluded for survey purposes (see Fig. 1).
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Fig. 1 Study population and participation (U urban, R rural). 1 Ineligible as these households had no persons within the age range 1865 years). 2 Households only with persons \18 or [65 years (n = 19), not knowing local language (n = 62) or who are bachelors staying together (n = 86). 3 Includes both refusals (nil rural, 25 urban) and non-participants (interview not possible even after three appointments, at least two of them being on Sundays or holidays)
In each surveyed locality, the rst household was identied using the random direction method. The survey team, on reaching the centre of the locality, numerically marked the major roads along all four directions. One road was selected corresponding to the last digit of a currency note. Households in this road were visited consecutively (door-to-door) by knocking at their doors unannounced (cold-calling). The rst household on the right side of the road became the rst in the survey. The second survey household was the one on the left side of the rst, and the third was the household on the left side of the second. This process continued until the requisite sample was achieved.
All households approached were accounted for in the survey (Fig. 1). When the doors were locked, or no responsible person (either the head of the household, or any other adult member of the household who could provide reliable information for all members) was available, the household was visited again on the same evening or within the next 3 days (mop-up visits). When necessary, the cooperation of neighbour households was sought to make contact with the required household members. Extra efforts were made to include such households during the last week of the survey in each area (nal mop-up round).
In each surveyed household, a responsible person was asked to list all members (dened as residing there for [6 months) in a specic order (oldest male rst, followed by oldest female, and so on to the youngest male and youngest female). From this list, one individual aged between 18 and 65 years, male or female, was randomly selected as the participant in the study. Those who were not conversant in the local language (Kannada) were excluded and replaced by further random selection from the household list. The selected participant was interviewed immediately if present and consenting; when he or she was not present, an appointment was made for a return visit at a convenient time. In case of refusal, only age and socioeconomic status were documented along with the key reason(s) for refusal. No replacements were made at the household level for selected respondents who withheld consent or failed to keep three appointments, two being on Sundays or holidays; these people were listed as non-participants (Fig. 1).
The study instrument
The survey instrument was a structured questionnaire developed for the study after a review of the literature; it has meanwhile been used, in appropriate translations, in community-based Global Campaign surveys of headache disorders in China [9] and Russia [10].
The rst part contained socio-demographic questions (on age, gender, education, income). The Kuppuswamy scale for classication of socio-economic status of individuals [11] was utilized after updating income levels to the year 2008. The second part began with the screening questions for lifetime (Have you ever had a headache?) and 1-year prevalence of headache (Have you had headache during the last year?), and these were asked of all participants; it concluded, for those answering yes to the second question, with an enquiry into frequency of headache. Participants reporting headache on C15 days/month were asked a subset of questions designed to diagnose MOH. The third part consisted of diagnostic questions for migraine and TTH based on the International Classication of Headache Disorders, 2nd edition (ICHD-2) [7]. Before these were applied,
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an introductory question asked whether all headaches experienced by the participant were of one or[1 type: those with [1 type were asked to keep in mind only the subjectively most bothersome type. The fourth part comprised questions on headache with a 1-day timeframe (Did you have headache yesterday?), and duration, intensity and burden of that headache. The fth part enquired into health-care utilization for headache. The sixth was a single question on willingness to pay (WTP) for effective headache treatment (I want you to imagine that there is a treatment you can buy. If you take it, your headaches will not bother you. I am going to ask you how much you would be willing to pay for this treatment). The seventh part assessed disability burden using the Headache-Attributed Lost Time (HALT) index [12]. The eighth was the World Health Organizations 8-item Quality-of-Life scale of (WHOQoL-8) [13], and was applied to all participants to permit comparison between those with and without headache.
All parts were translated into Kannada following Lifting The Burdens translation protocol [14].
Diagnostic algorithm
Diagnoses were not made by the interviewers; instead, responses to the diagnostic question set were fed into an algorithm developed for the purposes of the study by LJS and TJS. This algorithm was converted to a computer program in Epi-info version 3.5 [15].
In participants reporting more than one headache type during the last year, only the subjectively most bothersome was diagnosed. As for the headache yesterday, it was asked only whether this had been of the same type as the most bothersome headache. Cases were rst identied of headache occurring on C15 days/month and, amongst them, those with medication overuse (MOH). The algorithm was applied to the remainder of the participants, applying ICHD-2 criteria [7] in hierarchical sequence rst for migraine, then for TTH, then for probable migraine and nally for probable TTH. Cases remaining were considered unclassiable. In the later analysis, migraine and probable migraine were grouped as all-migraine, and TTH and probable TTH as all-TTH.
Selection and training of interviewers
Six eld interviewers with a background in social sciences, and experienced in the methods and techniques of community-based surveys, were recruited for data collection. They were trained through multiple methods: lectures, demonstrations, supervised and independent skill-development sessions. The Manual for descriptive studies developed by NIMHANS [16] for epidemiological studies in developing countries was a key resource document. Training was
conducted in the local language (Kannada). Interviewers were taken through the nal version of the questionnaire so that they understood the nature and sequence of questions, and which were of particular importance (e.g., the screening and diagnostic questions). As hands-on instruction, they undertook mock and supervised interviews, and, nally, independent interviews on patients with and without headache in the outpatient department of NIMHANS. These steps aimed to standardize the method of data collection, reducing intra- and inter-observer variability.
Pre-pilot and pilot studies
The pre-pilot study was undertaken in the clinical setting. A neurologist and headache expert (GBK) administered the study questionnaire to 40 purposively selected individuals to demonstrate acceptability and inoffensiveness of the questionnaire.
The pilot study was population based, applying the full study methodology for selection of participants and data collection. It was conducted in both rural and urban areas, and interviewed 224 individuals aged 1865 years, representative of the different socioeconomic strata. Its objectives were to test procedures for selection of households and of participants within households, eld test the study instrument, estimate the participation rate and identify and solve logistic problems that might occur in the main study.
During the pilot study, the KISH method [17] of selecting participants from individual households gave a very low interview-completion rate (34 %) compared with simple random selection from the household member list (89 %). Hence, it was decided to use the latter in the main study. Experience from the pilot study also led to editing of the questions on headache characteristics and willingness to pay to suit the cultural context. HALT index and WHOQoL questions needed more explanations to the interviewee to clarify the concepts behind them and their foci of enquiry.
Main study
The trained interviewers, calling door-to-door in the manner described above, visited households in the identied urban and rural communities. They conducted interviews during morning hours and at mutually convenient times by appointment. In the rural area, the eld staff took up temporary residence nearer to the study locality to ensure that early morning, late evening, Sunday and holiday appointments were not missed.
Quality assurance
Weekly monitoring meetings were held at NIMHANS, Department of Epidemiology to review the progress of
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work. The investigators conducted monthly refresher training for the eld staff. Surprise eld visits were undertaken, and a 10 % sub-sample of participants were re-interviewed within 3 weeks of rst interview. The discrepancies were very few and, as they pertained to the nature of costs incurred, they were not considered to be signicant.
Validation study
Diagnostic validation required that a sub-sample of participants were re-interviewed, soon after, by a headache expert (GBK) who was blind to the questionnaire diagnoses and applied his clinical skills as well as ICHD-2 criteria to make his own gold-standard diagnoses. The 15 % sub-sample was randomly selected. Reviews were undertaken within 36 weeks of the primary interviews.
In the beginning, letters were sent inviting selected participants from urban areas to NIMHANS and those from rural areas to its extension services. Because of very poor response, general health camps were held in both urban and rural areas, in the surveyed localities (with a maximum walking distance of 1 km). They were conducted on holidays or Sundays by arrangement with local leaders. The response among selected participants was only marginally better (fewer than one quarter attended, the majority of whom were badly affected by migraine). However, turnout was huge as people found it a good opportunity to seek care for general medical problems and/or other neurological problems. This posed logistic difculties in planning the camps and, especially, to arrange supplies of free medication.
Finally, the door-knock approach was adopted, with the headache expert calling a second time at the houses of selected participants, and this provided acceptable coverage rates.
Data entry
Completed survey forms, as received, were scrutinized for accuracy, completeness, inconsistencies, wrong or illegible markings and missed entries rst by the team coordinator (Mr. Lokesh) and then by study team member (KR). When discrepancies were observed, study team members (primarily KR but also GNR and GG) discussed them with the eld research ofcers during the weekly meetings. Minor discrepancies (wrong markings, illegible entries) were corrected after discussion but, if there were more major discrepancies, or important data were not collected, the team coordinator was asked to re-visit the household to ascertain what was correct. In fact there were no major discrepancies from the second week of the survey until completion.
Data were entered into a secure database using Epiinfo [15]. A random 10 % of the entered data was cross checked
against the original forms. There were very few wrong entries, and therefore no concerns about the overall accuracy of data entry. The high level of accuracy was possible due to the check-conditions and jump-conditions included in developing the data entry form in Epiinfo.
Statistical analysis
Analyses were undertaken using Epiinfo [15] and SPSS [18]. In the validation study, sensitivities, specicities and positive (PPV) and negative predictive values (NPV) [19] and Cohens Kappa scores [20] were calculated using freely available on-line statistical calculators.
Results
A total of 2,714 households (1,521 urban 1,193 rural) were visited, in which 12,253 individuals were enumerated. Of 2,514 biologically unrelated individuals (1,354 [53.9 %] urban; 1,160 [46.1 %] rural) who were eligible and selected for interview, 2,329 consented to participate (participation rate 92.6 %) (Fig. 1). Of the 185 non-participants, only 25 (all urban) refused to be interviewed; the main reason for non-participation was missing three agreed appointments to complete the survey interview. A majority of non-participants were male ([75 %) and from urban area (69 %). Of participants, 49 % were male, with little difference between urban and rural areas (Table 1).
The average time needed for interviews was approximately 40 min (range 2065 min).
In the validation sub-sample were 482 selected participants of whom 381 (79 % [76.5 % urban; 82.0 % rural] of those selected and 16 % [16 % urban; 17 % rural] of all participants) were re-interviewed. The other 101 could not participate because either they were not available or they refused.
Sensitivity, specicity, PPV and NPV for any headache, and specicities and NPVs for migraine and TTH, were C79 %, whereas the sensitivities and PPVs for migraine, TTH and headache on C15 days/month were lower (5563 %) (Table 2). Kappa values showed good agreement (0.69; 95 % CI 0.610.76) between headache-expert and algorithmic diagnoses for any headache, moderate agreement (0.46; 0.350.56) for migraine and fair agreement (0.39; 0.290.49) for TTH. There were only minor variations between urban and rural areas.
In the validation study, the prevalence of migraine was22.8 %, the prevalence of TTH was 33.3 % and the prevalence of headache occurring on C15 days/month was 2.1 %. There were unclassiable headaches in 3.4 % (Fig. 2) . The proportions were higher in rural areas (Migraine: 27.5 % in Rural and 18.6 % in Urban; TTH: 34.1 % in Rural and32.7 % in Urban; CDH: 3.3 % in Rural and 1.0 % in Urban).
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Table 1 Comparison between responders and non-responders
Responders Non-respondersa
Urban Rural Total Urban Rural Total
n 1,226 1,103 2,329 128 57 185
Male gender (%) 49.8 48.1 49.0 75 77.2 75.7
Age (mean SD) 36.7 12.4 39.5 13.0 38.0 12.8 35.4 11.1 39.0 12.1 37.0 11.8
Socio-economic status (%)
Upper (I) 2.0 0.0 1.1 3.0 0.0 2.2
Upper middle (II) 27.7 4.2 16.6 30.2 6.5 23.2
Lower middle (III) 44.0 15.7 30.6 42.2 17.6 34.6 Upper lower (IV) 25.4 77.2 49.9 23.1 72.1 38.4
Lower (V) 0.8 2.9 1.8 1.5 3.8 2.2
a Includes both refusals (n = 25, all urban) and non-participants (interview not possible even after three appointments, at least two of them on Sundays or holidays)
Table 2 Estimates of questionnaire diagnostic accuracy for different headache types
Any headache Migraine TTH CDH
Sensitivity, % (95 % CI) 88 (8391) 63 (5272) 57 (4865) 57 (4865)
Specicity, % (95 % CI) 81 (7487) 85 (8189) 81 (7686) 82 (7686)
Positive predictive value, % (95 % CI) 89 (8492) 55 (4565) 61 (5269 61 (5269)
Negative predictive value, % (95 % CI) 80 (7386) 89 (8592) 79 (7484) 79 (7485)
Kappa value (95 % CI) 0.69 (0.610.76) 0.46 (0.350.56) 0.39 (0.290.49) 0.51 (0.240.79)
Migraine and TTH include probable migraine and probable TTH, respectively
35%
33.3%
30%
25%
22.8%
20%
15%
10%
5%
2.1% 3.4%
0%
All MIG All TTH CDH NOS
Fig. 2 Prevalence of primary headache disorders according to expert diagnosis in the validation sample (n = 381) (All-MIG migraine ? probable migraine, All TTH tension-type headache ? probable tension-type headache, CDH headache occurring on C15 days/month, NOS not otherwise specied [unclassiable])
Results from the main study will be presented in future publications.
Discussion
This study is the rst population-based survey in India to estimate the prevalence of primary headache disorders, and
the rst to measure headache-attributed burden. To overcome the several methodological limitations of earlier studies, we used essential principles of scientic survey methodology, ensured geographical and socioeconomic representativeness, adopted probability methods of random sampling, used carefully trained interviewers, had a high participation rate ([90 %), included the major primary headache disorders (migraine and TTH) and MOH, employed ICHD-2 diagnostic criteria [7], validated the diagnostic questionnaire against headache-expert diagnoses, estimated life-time, 1-year and 1-day prevalences and quantied headache-attributed burden in a number of ways. We also imposed very stringent quality control.
Most previous studies from India have been clinic-based, but some neuroepidemiological surveys included a question on the presence or absence of headache and/or migraine. The largest, the Bangalore Urban Rural Neuroepidemiological (BURN) study [21], adopted the two-stage method of screening and subsequent conrmation by neurologist [16, 22] and, despite the unfeasibly low prevalence estimates (headache 1.1 % and migraine \1 %), headache was the most commonly reported neurological problem. The ndings of the present study will be reported elsewhere but, meanwhile, the validation study, in a small but random sub-sample of the participants of the main
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study, indicates that headache is much more prevalent in India, and in accord with ndings from other parts of the world [6].
Researchers in developing countries such as India face challenges in undertaking community-based studies: not only are there resource constraints, but the country is large and the population highly diverse in culture, education and wealth. While technological limitations restrict the use of telephone interviews or web-based surveys, door-to-door visiting remains the only effective way of selecting and achieving access to a representative sample of the population. This method consumes resources that are not readily available. At the same time, there are few headache specialists or neurologists available, and even fewer who are willing to participate in population surveys. The approach we adoptedof survey by trained lay interviewers with diagnostic validation by a specialist in a sub-sample of those surveyedis a practical option. Use of a questionnaire that has been employed and validated in surveys in different countries, and of a diagnostic algorithm based on ICHD-2 criteria, ensures comparability between studies. The questionnaire developed for this survey was meanwhile used in similar population-based studies in China [9] and Russia [10].
Diagnosis is of crucial importance, central to all epidemiological surveys. The clinimetric properties of the questionnaire gave acceptable levels of agreement for any headache disorder and for migraine in these studies [9, 10], as it did here (Tables 2 and 3). In all cases, sensitivity was lower than specicity, which is also a characteristic of ICHD-2 [7]. High specicities ensure that most ([80 %)
diagnosed cases were correct, while lower sensitivities, especially for TTH, may mean that under-diagnosis occurred. With TTH this is particularly true because, on the one hand, ICHD-2 diagnostic criteria for TTH are especially inclined towards insensitivity and, on the other, many cases of TTH are mild and/or infrequent and therefore not readily reported. From a public-health perspective, however, this may not greatly matter: such cases are not associated with signicant health-care need.
It is a particular challenge in population surveys to obtain reliable and consistent answers to questions related to duration of headache attacks, quality and severity of pain, inuence of physical activity, photophobia, phonophobia and other associated symptoms. Yet diagnosis hinges on these answers. Well-trained and interested interviewers are essential, who understand which questions are of special importance and why, and we strongly recommend involving them from the conceptual stages of the survey. Not all headache types can be identied by standard survey methodsand not all may be important to the survey objectives. These require clear denition: for example, a survey of headaches of public-health importance needs to identify only migraine, TTH and headache on C15 days/month (including MOH). (This, we believe, is generally true: it may be that chronic post-traumatic headache and chronic post-meningitic headache should be considered in some countries). Multiple headache types in the same individual cause difculties for respondents and interviewers unless these are clearly separated. It may be too much to expect detailed questions to be answered accurately, or at all, on more than one headache type, and surveys should not attempt to be overambitious in this respect. The most bothersome headache approach addresses this, is parsimonious and has also been successfully adopted in other studies [9, 10, 23]. Recall bias is an important and potentially problematic factor, and inclusion of questions on headache yesterday addresses this directly. It produces a parallel dataset that should be consistent with the main dataset; if it is not, recall bias must be suspected. But more than this, the 1-day timeframeprovided that the sample size is large enoughgives a very clear view of population burden.
In all of this, how important is quality assurance? There must be some quality assurance measures taken, but it is difcult to know what level of investment in these is maximally efcient. We chose to put a substantial part of the available resources into themweekly monitoring meetings, monthly refresher eld-staff training, surprise eld visits, re-interview of a 10 % sub-sample of the participants and rigorous data-entry checks. We believe that these constituted a major strength of the study, and that the results, when reported, will be robust because of them. The rate of detected errors was low, but quality assurance measures do not merely detect errorsthey also prevent them.
The main weakness of the study is that it was performed in only one Indian State. In a large and culturally diverse country, caution must be exercised in generalizing the results to other States and in extrapolating to the population of the country. The study focused on primary headache disorders, and did not include secondary headaches other than MOH. It did not enquire about hypertension (often
Table 3 Properties of the diagnostic instrument in this and other studies
Study Migraine TTH
Sensitivity (%)
Specicity (%)
Sensitivity (%)
Specicity (%)
Yu et al. [9] 83 99 51 99
Ayzenberg et al. [10]
77 82 64 91
Present study 63 85 57 81
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unrecognized and untreated in India) or past history of head injury (common in India). These two conditions could have contributed to the observed prevalence of headache, and future epidemiological surveys could specically enquire and incorporate them into the validity phase of the study.
In conclusion, this study is the rst community-based scientic survey of primary headache disorders in a large urban/rural population of India in which diagnoses are based on ICHD-2 criteria. Several methodological limitations of earlier studies were identied and overcome. The results will follow in later publications.
Acknowledgments We thank Dr. D. Nagaraja, former Director and Vice Chancellor, and Dr. P. Satishchandra, present Director and Vice Chancellor of NIMHANS. We gratefully acknowledge the participation of the members of the communities from the villages of Uyamballi and Doddaaladahalli, Kanakapura Taluka, Bangalore rural district, and from Kempegowdanagara ward. We sincerely thank, in particular, Sri Lokesh M (Team coordinator), Sri Ravichandra R, Sri Chandrashekar AG, Sri Sombamadaiah, Sri Chandramohan KP and Sri Damodhar for their diligent eld work, and Sri Girish BG and Kum Manjula C for data entry. Thanks are due also to Dr. Tarun Dua and Dr. Vijay Chandra of the World Health Organization, and Dr.R. Srinivasa, Professor of Neurology, MS Ramaiah Hospitals, for guidance in planning and conducting the study. The study was supported nancially by Lifting The Burden, and was a project within the Global Campaign against Headache.
Conicts of interest Lars J. Stovner has during the last 5 years received a travel grant from Pzer, research grant from AstraZeneca, and lecture honorarium from Allergan. The other authors declare that there are no conicts of interest.
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.
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The Author(s) 2012
Abstract
Primary headache disorders are a major public-health problem globally and, possibly more so, in low- and middle-income countries. No methodologically sound studies of prevalence and burden of headache in the adult Indian population have been published previously. The present study was a door-to-door cold-calling survey in urban and rural areas in and around Bangalore, Karnataka State. From 2,714 households contacted, 2,514 biologically unrelated individuals were eligible for the survey and 2,329 (92.9 %) participated (1,103 [48 %] rural; 1,226 [52 %] urban; 1,141 [49 %] male; 1,188 [51 %] female; mean age 38.0 years). The focus was on primary headache (migraine and tension-type headache [TTH]) and medication-overuse headache. A structured questionnaire administered by trained lay interviewers was the instrument both for diagnosis (algorithmically determined from responses) and burden estimation. The screening question enquired into headache in the last year. The validation study compared questionnaire-based diagnoses with those obtained soon after through personal interview by a neurologist in a random sub-sample of participants (n = 381; 16 %). It showed high values (>80 %) for sensitivity, specificity and predictive values for any headache, and for specificity and negative predictive value for migraine and TTH. Kappa values for diagnostic agreement were good for any headache (0.69 [95 % CI 0.61-0.76]), moderate (0.46 [0.35-0.56]) for migraine and fair (0.39 [0.29-0.49]) for TTH. The survey methodology, including identification of and access to participants, proved feasible. The questionnaire proved effective in the survey population. The study will give reliable estimates of the prevalence and burden of headache, and of migraine and TTH specifically, in urban and rural Karnataka.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
You have requested "on-the-fly" machine translation of selected content from our databases. This functionality is provided solely for your convenience and is in no way intended to replace human translation. Show full disclaimer
Neither ProQuest nor its licensors make any representations or warranties with respect to the translations. The translations are automatically generated "AS IS" and "AS AVAILABLE" and are not retained in our systems. PROQUEST AND ITS LICENSORS SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIM ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES FOR AVAILABILITY, ACCURACY, TIMELINESS, COMPLETENESS, NON-INFRINGMENT, MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Your use of the translations is subject to all use restrictions contained in your Electronic Products License Agreement and by using the translation functionality you agree to forgo any and all claims against ProQuest or its licensors for your use of the translation functionality and any output derived there from. Hide full disclaimer