Poor medical care for people with migraine in Europe – evidence from the Eurolight study

Abstract Background Migraine is prevalent everywhere, and disabling. It is also neglected: consequently, it is under-diagnosed and undertreated. We analysed data from the Eurolight study on consultations and utilization of migraine-specific medications as indicators of adequacy of medical care in Eu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zaza Katsarava, Maka Mania, Christian Lampl, Johanna Herberhold, Timothy J. Steiner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-02-01
Series:The Journal of Headache and Pain
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s10194-018-0839-1
id doaj-13c5e7ff9ab943b2b224f67cff6f4ab7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-13c5e7ff9ab943b2b224f67cff6f4ab72020-11-24T23:51:20ZengBMCThe Journal of Headache and Pain1129-23691129-23772018-02-011911910.1186/s10194-018-0839-1Poor medical care for people with migraine in Europe – evidence from the Eurolight studyZaza Katsarava0Maka Mania1Christian Lampl2Johanna Herberhold3Timothy J. Steiner4Evangelical Hospital Unna, University of Duisburg-EssenAversi HospitalHeadache Medical Center, Department of Neurogeriatric Medicine and Remobilisation, Hospital of the Sisters of CharityMedical Faculty, Stradins UniversityDepartment of Neuromedicine and Movement Science, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, NTNU Norwegian University of Science and TechnologyAbstract Background Migraine is prevalent everywhere, and disabling. It is also neglected: consequently, it is under-diagnosed and undertreated. We analysed data from the Eurolight study on consultations and utilization of migraine-specific medications as indicators of adequacy of medical care in Europe. Methods Eurolight was a cross-sectional questionnaire-based survey in 10 European countries. Sampling was population-based in six (Germany, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Spain) and from consecutive patients attending general practitioners (GPs) for any reason in three (Austria, France, UK). Additional samples in Netherlands and Spain, and the only sample from Ireland, were recruited by lay headache organisations. We recorded migraine prevalence and frequency, and utilization of medical services and medications (acute and preventative). Results Among 9247 participants (mean age 43.9 ± 13.9 years, M/F ratio 1:1.4), 3466 (37.6%) were diagnosed with migraine (definite or probable). Of these, 1175 (33.8%) reported frequent migraine (> 5 days/month) and might clearly expect benefit from, and therefore had need of, preventative medication. In population-based samples, minorities of participants with migraine had seen a GP (9.5–18.0%) or specialist (3.1–15.0%), and smaller minorities received adequate treatment: triptans 3.4–11.0%, with Spain outlying at 22.4%; preventative medication (1.6–6.4% of those eligible, with Spain again outlying at 13.7%). Proportions were greater in GP-based samples (13.6–24.5% using triptans, 4.4–9.1% on preventative medication) and among those from lay organisations (46.2–68.2% and 16.0–41.7%). Participants with migraine who had consulted specialists (3.1–33.8%) were receiving the best care by these indicators; those treated by GPs (9.5–29.6%) fared less well, and those dependent on self-medication (48.0–84.2%) were, apparently, inadequately treated. Conclusion In wealthy European countries, too few people with migraine consult physicians, with proportionately too many of these seeing specialists, and migraine-specific medications are used inadequately even among those who do. These findings represent yet another call for action in Europe to improve care for people with headache. Education of both health-care providers and the public should be central to this action.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s10194-018-0839-1HeadacheMigraineImpactHealth careHealth policyEurope
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zaza Katsarava
Maka Mania
Christian Lampl
Johanna Herberhold
Timothy J. Steiner
spellingShingle Zaza Katsarava
Maka Mania
Christian Lampl
Johanna Herberhold
Timothy J. Steiner
Poor medical care for people with migraine in Europe – evidence from the Eurolight study
The Journal of Headache and Pain
Headache
Migraine
Impact
Health care
Health policy
Europe
author_facet Zaza Katsarava
Maka Mania
Christian Lampl
Johanna Herberhold
Timothy J. Steiner
author_sort Zaza Katsarava
title Poor medical care for people with migraine in Europe – evidence from the Eurolight study
title_short Poor medical care for people with migraine in Europe – evidence from the Eurolight study
title_full Poor medical care for people with migraine in Europe – evidence from the Eurolight study
title_fullStr Poor medical care for people with migraine in Europe – evidence from the Eurolight study
title_full_unstemmed Poor medical care for people with migraine in Europe – evidence from the Eurolight study
title_sort poor medical care for people with migraine in europe – evidence from the eurolight study
publisher BMC
series The Journal of Headache and Pain
issn 1129-2369
1129-2377
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Abstract Background Migraine is prevalent everywhere, and disabling. It is also neglected: consequently, it is under-diagnosed and undertreated. We analysed data from the Eurolight study on consultations and utilization of migraine-specific medications as indicators of adequacy of medical care in Europe. Methods Eurolight was a cross-sectional questionnaire-based survey in 10 European countries. Sampling was population-based in six (Germany, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Spain) and from consecutive patients attending general practitioners (GPs) for any reason in three (Austria, France, UK). Additional samples in Netherlands and Spain, and the only sample from Ireland, were recruited by lay headache organisations. We recorded migraine prevalence and frequency, and utilization of medical services and medications (acute and preventative). Results Among 9247 participants (mean age 43.9 ± 13.9 years, M/F ratio 1:1.4), 3466 (37.6%) were diagnosed with migraine (definite or probable). Of these, 1175 (33.8%) reported frequent migraine (> 5 days/month) and might clearly expect benefit from, and therefore had need of, preventative medication. In population-based samples, minorities of participants with migraine had seen a GP (9.5–18.0%) or specialist (3.1–15.0%), and smaller minorities received adequate treatment: triptans 3.4–11.0%, with Spain outlying at 22.4%; preventative medication (1.6–6.4% of those eligible, with Spain again outlying at 13.7%). Proportions were greater in GP-based samples (13.6–24.5% using triptans, 4.4–9.1% on preventative medication) and among those from lay organisations (46.2–68.2% and 16.0–41.7%). Participants with migraine who had consulted specialists (3.1–33.8%) were receiving the best care by these indicators; those treated by GPs (9.5–29.6%) fared less well, and those dependent on self-medication (48.0–84.2%) were, apparently, inadequately treated. Conclusion In wealthy European countries, too few people with migraine consult physicians, with proportionately too many of these seeing specialists, and migraine-specific medications are used inadequately even among those who do. These findings represent yet another call for action in Europe to improve care for people with headache. Education of both health-care providers and the public should be central to this action.
topic Headache
Migraine
Impact
Health care
Health policy
Europe
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s10194-018-0839-1
work_keys_str_mv AT zazakatsarava poormedicalcareforpeoplewithmigraineineuropeevidencefromtheeurolightstudy
AT makamania poormedicalcareforpeoplewithmigraineineuropeevidencefromtheeurolightstudy
AT christianlampl poormedicalcareforpeoplewithmigraineineuropeevidencefromtheeurolightstudy
AT johannaherberhold poormedicalcareforpeoplewithmigraineineuropeevidencefromtheeurolightstudy
AT timothyjsteiner poormedicalcareforpeoplewithmigraineineuropeevidencefromtheeurolightstudy
_version_ 1725476255351963648