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Research
Articles
Archived
Articles
Journal
of Clinical Epidemiology 54(2001)851-856
The
association between exposure to a rear-end collision and future
health complaints
Anita
Berglund
a, *, Lars Alfredsson
b , Irene Jensen a
, J. David Cassidy a,c
, Ake Nygren a
a Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska
Institutet, Box 12718, SE-112 94 Stockholm, Sweden
b Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet,
Stockholm, Sweden
c Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Alberta,
Canada
Received 16 March 2000; received in revised form 8 November 2000;
accepted 4 December 2000
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Abstract
Different symptoms, together with neck pain, have been attributed
to persons with persistent complaints after a previous motor vehi-cle
crash (MVC) and are sometimes referred to as the “late whiplash
syndrome.” A cohort study was conducted to determine whether ex-posure
to a rear-end collision, with or without whiplash injury, is associated
with future health complaints. The results regarding future neck
or shoulder pain have previously been described, and the objective
of the present report was to focus on outcomes other than neck pain.
Included in the study were persons 18 to 65 years of age and covered
by traffic insurance at one of the largest insurance companies in
Sweden. Claim reports were collected from the period November 1987
to April 1988. Drivers exposed to a rear-end collision were di-vided
into two subgroups: those with reported whiplash injury (n 232)
and those without reported whiplash injury (n 204). For com-parison,
3688 subjects who were unexposed to MVCs were selected, with consideration
taken to the age and gender distribution in the ex-posed subgroups.
The prevalence of different health complaints among the study subjects
was estimated according to a mailed questionnaire at follow-up in
1994, 7 years after the rear-end collision. When exposed subjects
with whiplash injury were compared to un-exposed subjects, increased
relative risks in the range of 1.6–3.7 were seen for headache, thoracic
and low back pain, as well as for fatigue, sleep disturbances and
ill health. No corresponding increased risks were found among the
exposed subjects without reported whiplash in-jury. We conclude
that rear-end collisions resulting in reported whiplash injuries
seem to have a substantial impact on health complaints, even a long
time after the collision. There is a need to identify factors that
predict a non-favorable outcome in order to improve clinical management.
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© 2001 Elsevier
Science Inc. All rights reserved.
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