The prevalence of headache in the adult population of Morocco: a cross-sectional population-based study

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The prevalence of headache in the adult population of Morocco : a cross-sectional population-based study. / Kissani, Najib; Adarmouch, Latifa; Sidibe, Aboubacar Sidik; Garmane, Abderrahmane; Founoun, Rachid; Chraa, Mohamed; Thomas, Hallie; Husøy, Andreas; Steiner, Timothy J.

I: Journal of Headache and Pain, Bind 25, Nr. 1, 49, 01.2024.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Kissani, N, Adarmouch, L, Sidibe, AS, Garmane, A, Founoun, R, Chraa, M, Thomas, H, Husøy, A & Steiner, TJ 2024, 'The prevalence of headache in the adult population of Morocco: a cross-sectional population-based study', Journal of Headache and Pain, bind 25, nr. 1, 49. https://doi.org/10.1186/s10194-024-01761-y

APA

Kissani, N., Adarmouch, L., Sidibe, A. S., Garmane, A., Founoun, R., Chraa, M., Thomas, H., Husøy, A., & Steiner, T. J. (2024). The prevalence of headache in the adult population of Morocco: a cross-sectional population-based study. Journal of Headache and Pain, 25(1), [49]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s10194-024-01761-y

Vancouver

Kissani N, Adarmouch L, Sidibe AS, Garmane A, Founoun R, Chraa M o.a. The prevalence of headache in the adult population of Morocco: a cross-sectional population-based study. Journal of Headache and Pain. 2024 jan.;25(1). 49. https://doi.org/10.1186/s10194-024-01761-y

Author

Kissani, Najib ; Adarmouch, Latifa ; Sidibe, Aboubacar Sidik ; Garmane, Abderrahmane ; Founoun, Rachid ; Chraa, Mohamed ; Thomas, Hallie ; Husøy, Andreas ; Steiner, Timothy J. / The prevalence of headache in the adult population of Morocco : a cross-sectional population-based study. I: Journal of Headache and Pain. 2024 ; Bind 25, Nr. 1.

Bibtex

@article{6052808d87f9430abd945ffa47d85faf,
title = "The prevalence of headache in the adult population of Morocco: a cross-sectional population-based study",
abstract = "Background: The series of population-based studies conducted by the Global Campaign against Headache has, so far, included Pakistan and Saudi Arabia from the Eastern Mediterranean Region. The Maghreb countries of North Africa, also part of this Region, are geographically apart and culturally very different from these countries. Here we report a study in Morocco. Methods: We applied the standardised methodology of Global Campaign studies, with cluster-randomized sampling in regions of Morocco selected to be representative of its diversities. In three of these regions, in accordance with this methodology, we made unannounced visits to randomly selected households and, from each, interviewed one randomly selected adult member (aged 18–65 years) using the HARDSHIP structured questionnaire translated into Moroccan Arabic and French. In a fourth region (F{\`e}s), because permission for such sampling was not given by the administrative authority, people were randomly stopped in streets and markets and, when willing, interviewed using the same questionnaire. This was a major protocol violation. Results: We included 3,474 participants, 1,074 (41.7%) from Agadir, 1,079 (41.9%) from Marrakech, 422 (16.4%) from T{\'e}touan and 899 from F{\`e}s. In a second protocol violation, interviewers failed to record the non-participating proportion. In the main analysis, excluding F{\`e}s, observed 1-year prevalence of any headache was 80.1% among females, 68.2% among males. Observed 1-day prevalence (headache yesterday) was 17.8%. After adjustment for age and gender, migraine prevalence was 30.8% (higher among females [aOR = 1.6]) and TTH prevalence 32.1% (lower among females [aOR = 0.8]). Headache on ≥ 15 days/month (H15+) was very common (10.5%), and in more than half of cases (5.9%) associated with acute medication overuse (on ≥ 15 days/month) and accordingly diagnosed as probable medication-overuse headache (pMOH). Both pMOH (aOR = 2.6) and other H15+ (aOR = 1.9) were more common among females. In the F{\`e}s sample, adjusted prevalences were similar, numerically but not significantly higher except for other H15+. Conclusions: While the 1-year prevalence of headache among adults in Morocco is similar to that of many other countries, migraine on the evidence here is at the upper end of the global range, but not outside it. H15 + and pMOH are very prevalent, contributing to the high one-day prevalence of headache.",
keywords = "Eastern Mediterranean Region, Epidemiology, Global Campaign against Headache, Headache, Maghreb, Medication-overuse headache, Migraine, Morocco, Population-based study, Prevalence, Tension-type headache",
author = "Najib Kissani and Latifa Adarmouch and Sidibe, {Aboubacar Sidik} and Abderrahmane Garmane and Rachid Founoun and Mohamed Chraa and Hallie Thomas and Andreas Hus{\o}y and Steiner, {Timothy J.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} The Author(s) 2024.",
year = "2024",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1186/s10194-024-01761-y",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
journal = "Journal of Headache and Pain",
issn = "1129-2369",
publisher = "SpringerOpen",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The prevalence of headache in the adult population of Morocco

T2 - a cross-sectional population-based study

AU - Kissani, Najib

AU - Adarmouch, Latifa

AU - Sidibe, Aboubacar Sidik

AU - Garmane, Abderrahmane

AU - Founoun, Rachid

AU - Chraa, Mohamed

AU - Thomas, Hallie

AU - Husøy, Andreas

AU - Steiner, Timothy J.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.

PY - 2024/1

Y1 - 2024/1

N2 - Background: The series of population-based studies conducted by the Global Campaign against Headache has, so far, included Pakistan and Saudi Arabia from the Eastern Mediterranean Region. The Maghreb countries of North Africa, also part of this Region, are geographically apart and culturally very different from these countries. Here we report a study in Morocco. Methods: We applied the standardised methodology of Global Campaign studies, with cluster-randomized sampling in regions of Morocco selected to be representative of its diversities. In three of these regions, in accordance with this methodology, we made unannounced visits to randomly selected households and, from each, interviewed one randomly selected adult member (aged 18–65 years) using the HARDSHIP structured questionnaire translated into Moroccan Arabic and French. In a fourth region (Fès), because permission for such sampling was not given by the administrative authority, people were randomly stopped in streets and markets and, when willing, interviewed using the same questionnaire. This was a major protocol violation. Results: We included 3,474 participants, 1,074 (41.7%) from Agadir, 1,079 (41.9%) from Marrakech, 422 (16.4%) from Tétouan and 899 from Fès. In a second protocol violation, interviewers failed to record the non-participating proportion. In the main analysis, excluding Fès, observed 1-year prevalence of any headache was 80.1% among females, 68.2% among males. Observed 1-day prevalence (headache yesterday) was 17.8%. After adjustment for age and gender, migraine prevalence was 30.8% (higher among females [aOR = 1.6]) and TTH prevalence 32.1% (lower among females [aOR = 0.8]). Headache on ≥ 15 days/month (H15+) was very common (10.5%), and in more than half of cases (5.9%) associated with acute medication overuse (on ≥ 15 days/month) and accordingly diagnosed as probable medication-overuse headache (pMOH). Both pMOH (aOR = 2.6) and other H15+ (aOR = 1.9) were more common among females. In the Fès sample, adjusted prevalences were similar, numerically but not significantly higher except for other H15+. Conclusions: While the 1-year prevalence of headache among adults in Morocco is similar to that of many other countries, migraine on the evidence here is at the upper end of the global range, but not outside it. H15 + and pMOH are very prevalent, contributing to the high one-day prevalence of headache.

AB - Background: The series of population-based studies conducted by the Global Campaign against Headache has, so far, included Pakistan and Saudi Arabia from the Eastern Mediterranean Region. The Maghreb countries of North Africa, also part of this Region, are geographically apart and culturally very different from these countries. Here we report a study in Morocco. Methods: We applied the standardised methodology of Global Campaign studies, with cluster-randomized sampling in regions of Morocco selected to be representative of its diversities. In three of these regions, in accordance with this methodology, we made unannounced visits to randomly selected households and, from each, interviewed one randomly selected adult member (aged 18–65 years) using the HARDSHIP structured questionnaire translated into Moroccan Arabic and French. In a fourth region (Fès), because permission for such sampling was not given by the administrative authority, people were randomly stopped in streets and markets and, when willing, interviewed using the same questionnaire. This was a major protocol violation. Results: We included 3,474 participants, 1,074 (41.7%) from Agadir, 1,079 (41.9%) from Marrakech, 422 (16.4%) from Tétouan and 899 from Fès. In a second protocol violation, interviewers failed to record the non-participating proportion. In the main analysis, excluding Fès, observed 1-year prevalence of any headache was 80.1% among females, 68.2% among males. Observed 1-day prevalence (headache yesterday) was 17.8%. After adjustment for age and gender, migraine prevalence was 30.8% (higher among females [aOR = 1.6]) and TTH prevalence 32.1% (lower among females [aOR = 0.8]). Headache on ≥ 15 days/month (H15+) was very common (10.5%), and in more than half of cases (5.9%) associated with acute medication overuse (on ≥ 15 days/month) and accordingly diagnosed as probable medication-overuse headache (pMOH). Both pMOH (aOR = 2.6) and other H15+ (aOR = 1.9) were more common among females. In the Fès sample, adjusted prevalences were similar, numerically but not significantly higher except for other H15+. Conclusions: While the 1-year prevalence of headache among adults in Morocco is similar to that of many other countries, migraine on the evidence here is at the upper end of the global range, but not outside it. H15 + and pMOH are very prevalent, contributing to the high one-day prevalence of headache.

KW - Eastern Mediterranean Region

KW - Epidemiology

KW - Global Campaign against Headache

KW - Headache

KW - Maghreb

KW - Medication-overuse headache

KW - Migraine

KW - Morocco

KW - Population-based study

KW - Prevalence

KW - Tension-type headache

U2 - 10.1186/s10194-024-01761-y

DO - 10.1186/s10194-024-01761-y

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38565983

AN - SCOPUS:85189329316

VL - 25

JO - Journal of Headache and Pain

JF - Journal of Headache and Pain

SN - 1129-2369

IS - 1

M1 - 49

ER -

ID: 389666570