Abstract
The burden is huge and not reflected in national health priorities Musculoskeletal conditions have an enormous and growing impact world wide. “Health 21,” the health for all policy framework for the World Health Organization's European region,1 identifies musculoskeletal conditions as a target, yet national health care priorities in the United Kingdom and most European countries do not include them. To address this imbalance the United Nation, the WHO, governments, and professional and patients' organisations have declared 2000-10 the “bone and joint decade” with the aim of improving the health related quality of life of people with musculoskeletal conditions. Although one of the aims of the decade is to increase the recognition and understanding of the burden posed by musculoskeletal conditions, there are already enough data to show the size of the problem. Musculoskeletal impairments ranked number one in chronic impairments in the United States,2 and chronic musculoskeletal pain is reported in surveys by 1 in 4 people in both less and more developed countries.3 Musculoskeletal conditions were the most expensive disease category in a Swedish cost of …
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Estimating the Global Clinical Burden of Plasmodium falciparum Malaria in 2007
Cartographic approaches to burden estimation provide a globally consistent measure of malaria morbidity of known fidelity, and they represent the only plausible method in those ...
Respiratory Rehabilitation, Exercise Capacity and Quality of Life in Chronic Airways Disease in Old Age
Respiratory rehabilitation improves exercise capacity and quality of life in younger patients but is untried in the aged. We aimed to: (a) assess repeatability of the 6-minute w...
A Scoping Review and Thematic Classification of Patient Complexity: Offering a Unifying Framework
The path to improving healthcare quality for individuals with complex health conditions is complicated by a lack of common understanding of complexity. Modern medicine, together...
Evidence for a Secular Trend in Age of Menarche
WE present data documenting a secular trend toward an earlier age of menarche in Europe and the United States in the past century. There has been recent controversy on whether s...
Publication Info
- Year
- 2001
- Type
- editorial
- Volume
- 322
- Issue
- 7294
- Pages
- 1079-1080
- Citations
- 293
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1136/bmj.322.7294.1079