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Journal Article

Citation

McLean SA, Ulirsch JC, Slade GD, Soward AC, Swor RA, Peak DA, Jones JS, Rathlev NK, Lee DC, Domeier RM, Hendry PL, Bortsov AV, Bair E. Pain 2014; 155(2): 309-321.

Affiliation

TRYUMPH Research Program (SAM, JCU, ACS, AVB); Anesthesiology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC (SAM, JCU, ACS, AVB); Emergency Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC (SAM). Electronic address: smclean@aims.unc.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Lippincott, Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1016/j.pain.2013.10.016

PMID

24145211

Abstract

Debate continues regarding the influence of litigation on pain outcomes after motor vehicle collision (MVC). In this study we enrolled European Americans presenting to the emergency department (ED) in the hours after MVC (n = 948). Six weeks later, participants were interviewed regarding pain symptoms and asked about their participation in MVC-related litigation. The incidence and predictors of neck pain and widespread pain six weeks after MVC were compared among those engaged in litigation ("litigants") and those not engaged in litigation ("non-litigants"). Among the 859/948 (91%) participants completing six week follow-up, 711/849 (83%) were non-litigants. Compared to non-litigants, litigants were less educated and had more severe neck pain, overall pain, and a greater extent of pain at the time of ED evaluation. Among individuals not engaged in litigation, persistent pain six weeks after MVC was common: 199/711 (28%) had moderate or severe neck pain, 92/711 (13%) had widespread pain, and 29/711 (4%) had fibromyalgia-like symptoms. Incidence of all three outcomes was significantly higher among litigants. Initial pain severity in the ED predicted pain outcomes among both litigants and non-litigants. Markers of socioeconomic disadvantage predicted worse pain outcomes in litigants but not non-litigants, and individual pain and psychological symptoms were less predictive of pain outcomes among those engaged in litigation. These data demonstrate that persistent pain after MVC is common among those not engaged in litigation, and provide evidence for bidirectional influences between pain outcomes and litigation after MVC.


Language: en

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