Table 7

Data from the epidemiologic literature on back pain in boys and girls (age included)

Petersen et al. [ 19 ] Grøholt et al. [ 26 ] Sato et al. [ 22 ] Stanford et al. [ 20 ] Kjær et al. [ 7 ]
Country SwedenNordic countriesJapanCanadaDenmark
Design Cross sectionalCross sectionalCross sectionalLongitudinal – 8 yrsCross sectional + follow up
Study sample Randomized cluster sample of pupilsPopulation registries children surveyElementary and junior high school-children in Niigata CityNon-institutionalized civilian population (1994–5, 1996–7, 1998–9, 2002–3)Primary/secondary school. 38 state schools in one municipality
Response rate 97%64.5-69%79.8%?62%, 57%, 58%
Valid sample size 11215911 (BP)344232488479, 439, 443
Data collection QuestionnaireQuestionnaireQuestionnaireComputer ass. Interview + QuestionnaireInterview + Questionnaire
Age group 6-137-9, 10–12, 13–15, 16-179-1510-189, 13, 15 (mean 9.7, 13.1, 15.7)
Definition of back pain Backache the last 6 monthsHas the child had any of the following complaints? (BP, headache e.g.)Any LBP nowBackache past 6 monthsAny spinal pain
Gender No gender differenceGirls > boys in all pain categories11-12y girls > boysGirls > boysNo difference in overall back (spinal) pain reporting at age 9 and 13 yrs.
Age (prevalence increase) Prevalence of bachache higher from grades 4–6 than in grades 0–3 (Method change)BP + headache most prevalent in the oldest age groups compared to the youngestIncreasing prevalence with grade levels until age 14 (LBP: Point prevalence)Girls 12–18 yrs > boys 12–18 yrs> 13 yrs