An epidemiological investigation of neck pain in the white population in the greater Durban area

Dissertation submitted in partial compliance with the requirements for a Masters Degree in Technology: Chiropractic, Durban University of Technology, 2010. === The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of and risk factors for neck pain in the white population in the greater Durban area....

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Main Author: Slabbert, Warren Neville
Other Authors: Boodhoo, Vilash
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10321/538
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-dut-oai-localhost-10321-5382016-04-21T04:10:54Z An epidemiological investigation of neck pain in the white population in the greater Durban area Slabbert, Warren Neville Boodhoo, Vilash Korporaal, Charmaine Maria Neck pain Chiropractic Epidemiology Risk factors Population Prevalence Chiropractic Neck pain Whites--South Africa--Durban Neck pain--Epidemiology Dissertation submitted in partial compliance with the requirements for a Masters Degree in Technology: Chiropractic, Durban University of Technology, 2010. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of and risk factors for neck pain in the white population in the greater Durban area. The rational for this study was that there have been few epidemiological studies done on neck pain and even less when concerning different population groups. Discrepancies between population groups have been found in various pain related studies. The present epidemiological study eliminated any possible variables between population groups by studying only the white population in a specific geographical area (Durban). Therefore, physicians treating people with neck pain should use the risk factors that were established in this and other studies and integrate them in their treatment protocol. The study was conducted at three shopping centres around Durban that were randomly selected. Each shopping centre was grouped by the socio-economic status of the surrounding suburbs. There were 900 participants surveyed at three shopping centres by means of a questionnaire. The data were then statistically analysed using SPSS version 15. It was found that the overall prevalence of neck pain was 45%. The participants in this study that had neck pain were more likely to be females that were married or previously married, had a job that caused their heads to turn or to work with their arms above their heads. Lifestyle factors included one or a combination of the following: lead a stressful lifestyle, were emotional, had perceived bad posture, had previously experienced neck or head trauma, slept in awkward positions, watched television, required glasses and did not play squash. 2010-09-08T09:03:59Z 2012-04-01T22:20:04Z 2010 Thesis 325869 http://hdl.handle.net/10321/538 en 116 p
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Neck pain
Chiropractic
Epidemiology
Risk factors
Population
Prevalence
Chiropractic
Neck pain
Whites--South Africa--Durban
Neck pain--Epidemiology
spellingShingle Neck pain
Chiropractic
Epidemiology
Risk factors
Population
Prevalence
Chiropractic
Neck pain
Whites--South Africa--Durban
Neck pain--Epidemiology
Slabbert, Warren Neville
An epidemiological investigation of neck pain in the white population in the greater Durban area
description Dissertation submitted in partial compliance with the requirements for a Masters Degree in Technology: Chiropractic, Durban University of Technology, 2010. === The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of and risk factors for neck pain in the white population in the greater Durban area. The rational for this study was that there have been few epidemiological studies done on neck pain and even less when concerning different population groups. Discrepancies between population groups have been found in various pain related studies. The present epidemiological study eliminated any possible variables between population groups by studying only the white population in a specific geographical area (Durban). Therefore, physicians treating people with neck pain should use the risk factors that were established in this and other studies and integrate them in their treatment protocol. The study was conducted at three shopping centres around Durban that were randomly selected. Each shopping centre was grouped by the socio-economic status of the surrounding suburbs. There were 900 participants surveyed at three shopping centres by means of a questionnaire. The data were then statistically analysed using SPSS version 15. It was found that the overall prevalence of neck pain was 45%. The participants in this study that had neck pain were more likely to be females that were married or previously married, had a job that caused their heads to turn or to work with their arms above their heads. Lifestyle factors included one or a combination of the following: lead a stressful lifestyle, were emotional, had perceived bad posture, had previously experienced neck or head trauma, slept in awkward positions, watched television, required glasses and did not play squash.
author2 Boodhoo, Vilash
author_facet Boodhoo, Vilash
Slabbert, Warren Neville
author Slabbert, Warren Neville
author_sort Slabbert, Warren Neville
title An epidemiological investigation of neck pain in the white population in the greater Durban area
title_short An epidemiological investigation of neck pain in the white population in the greater Durban area
title_full An epidemiological investigation of neck pain in the white population in the greater Durban area
title_fullStr An epidemiological investigation of neck pain in the white population in the greater Durban area
title_full_unstemmed An epidemiological investigation of neck pain in the white population in the greater Durban area
title_sort epidemiological investigation of neck pain in the white population in the greater durban area
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10321/538
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