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Chronic pain treatment and health service utilization of veterans with hepatitis C virus infection.

Lovejoy TI, Dobscha SK, Cavanagh R, Turk DC, Morasco BJ. Chronic pain treatment and health service utilization of veterans with hepatitis C virus infection. Pain medicine (Malden, Mass.). 2012 Nov 1; 13(11):1407-16.

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Abstract:

OBJECTIVES: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is estimated to affect 2% of the general U.S. population and chronic pain is a common comorbidity among persons with HCV. The primary purpose of this study was to compare health service utilization of U.S. military veterans with HCV with and without the presence of comorbid chronic pain. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study with retrospective review of patient medical records. PATIENTS: One hundred seventy-one U.S. military veterans with confirmed HCV, recruited through a single U.S. Veterans Administration hospital. OUTCOME MEASURES: Medical service utilization data from the past 5 years were extracted from participants'' electronic medical records. RESULTS: Sixty-four percent of veterans with HCV (N = 110) had chronic pain. Veterans with HCV and chronic pain utilized more health services including total inpatient stays (odds ratio [OR] = 2.58 [1.46, 4.56]) and days hospitalized for psychiatric services (OR = 5.50 [3.37, 8.99]), compared to participants with HCV and no chronic pain, after statistically adjusting for demographic, psychiatric, substance use, medical comorbidity, and disability covariates. In addition, those with HCV and chronic pain had more total outpatient visits with primary care providers (OR = 1.73 [1.15, 2.59]), physical therapists (OR = 9.57 [4.79, 19.11]), and occupational therapists (OR = 2.72 [1.00, 7.48]). CONCLUSIONS: Patients with HCV and chronic pain utilize medical services to a greater extent than patients with HCV but no chronic pain. Future studies that examine the efficacy of both pharmacological and nonpharmacological pain treatment for patients with comorbid HCV and chronic pain appear warranted.





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