Sense of Coherence and Medicine Use for Headache Among Adolescents
Abstract
Objective
To examine the association between headache, sense of coherence (SOC), and medicine use for headaches in a community-based sample of adolescents.
Methods
Epidemiological cross-sectional study, encompassing 20 out of 23 schools in the network of health-promoting schools in the county of South Jutland, Denmark. The study population consisted of students from seventh and ninth grade, participation rate 93%, n
=
1393. The students answered questions on demographic variables, health behavior including medicine use, psychosocial health aspects, and sense of coherence, in an anonymous standardized questionnaire. The outcome measure was self-reported medicine use for headaches. The determinants were headache frequency and SOC measured by Wold and Torsheim's version for children of Antonovsky's 13-item SOC scale.
Results
Analyses adjusted for age group, family social class, exposure to bullying, and headache frequency showed increasing odds for medicine use for headaches (hereafter: medicine use) by decreasing SOC. There was no association between SOC and medicine use among students with a rare experience of headaches but a significant and graded association among students with at least weekly experience of headaches, that is, frequency of headaches modified the association between SOC and medicine use.
Conclusions
We found that adolescents with low SOC used medicine to cope with headaches to a greater extent than adolescents with high SOC.
Keywords: Adolescents, Medicine use, Pharmacoepidemiology, Sense of coherence
PII: S1054-139X(08)00677-0
doi:10.1016/j.jadohealth.2008.12.009
© 2009 Society for Adolescent Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
