De. Beaton et al., Describing the burden of upper-extremity musculoskeletal disorders in newspaper workers: What difference do case definitions make?, J OCCUP REH, 10(1), 2000, pp. 39-53
Musculoskeletal disorders (MSD) of the upper limb are of growing concern, a
lthough there is no consensus On how to define a "case" of MSD. Varying the
case definition has been shown to alter the description of the prevalence
of the disorder. The purpose of this study was to compare the symptom descr
iption as well as the burden (disability costs, time off work) of MSD acros
s four different published case definitions, A survey was conducted at a la
rge urban newspaper and 1003 (84% response rate) people responded. The ques
tionnaire included measures of pain (intensity, frequency, duration), disab
ility, work disability, and absence. Case definitions permitted creation of
four overlapping samples, which were compared descriptively on the various
measures of burden of MSD. The case definitions led to different descripti
ons of burden associated with MSD. Contrasting between the two extremes (Hu
nting and NIOSH), differences were found in prevalence (55% vs. 20%), overa
ll disability (14.6 vs. 23.2/100, 100 = more disability) and difficulty at
work (8 vs. 15.5/100), and proportion reporting pain interfering with work
(27.3 vs. 16.2%). The various case definitions drew samples that were descr
ibed by different experiences in terms of burden. Studies rising different
case definitions therefore lack comparability The definition to use may dep
end on the study goals (primary or secondary prevention for example). Howev
er; consensus on a common definition would allow comparability across studi
es.