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Published in: The Journal of Headache and Pain 1/2024

Open Access 01-12-2024 | Headache | Research

The prevalence and demographic associations of headache in the adult population of Benin: a cross-sectional population-based study

Authors: Thierry Adoukonou, Mendinatou Agbetou, Eric Dettin, Oyene Kossi, Andreas Husøy, Hallie Thomas, Dismand Houinato, Timothy J Steiner

Published in: The Journal of Headache and Pain | Issue 1/2024

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Abstract

Background

The Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study is increasingly well informed with regard to headache disorders, but sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) remains one of the large regions of the world with limited data directly derived from population-based studies. The Global Campaign against Headache has conducted three studies in this region: Ethiopia in the east, Zambia in the south and Cameroon in Central SSA. Here we report a similar study in Benin, the first from West SSA.

Methods

We used the same methods and questionnaire, applying cluster-randomized sampling in three regions of the country, randomly selecting households in each region, visiting these unannounced and randomly selecting one adult member (aged 18–65 years) of each household. The HARDSHIP structured questionnaire, translated into Central African French, was administered face-to-face by trained interviewers. Demographic enquiry was followed by diagnostic questions based on ICHD-3 criteria.

Results

From 2,550 households with eligible members, we recruited 2,400 participants (participating proportion 94.1%). Headache ever was reported by almost all (95.2%), this being the lifetime prevalence. Headache in the last year was reported by 74.9%. Age-, gender- and habitation-adjusted estimates of 1-year prevalence were 72.9% for all headache, 21.2% for migraine (including definite and probable), 43.1% for TTH (also including definite and probable), 4.5% for probable medication-overuse (pMOH) and 3.1% for other headache on ≥ 15 days/month. One-day (point) prevalence of headache was 14.8% according to reported headache on the day preceding interview.

Conclusions

Overall, these findings are evidence that headache disorders are very common in Benin, a low-income country. The prevalence of pMOH, well above the estimated global mean of 1–2%, is evidence that poverty is not a bar to medication overuse. The findings are very much the same as those in a similar study in its near neighbour, Cameroon. With regard to migraine, they are reasonably in accord with two of three earlier studies in selected Beninese populations, which did not take account of probable migraine. This study adds to the hitherto limited knowledge of headache in SSA.
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Metadata
Title
The prevalence and demographic associations of headache in the adult population of Benin: a cross-sectional population-based study
Authors
Thierry Adoukonou
Mendinatou Agbetou
Eric Dettin
Oyene Kossi
Andreas Husøy
Hallie Thomas
Dismand Houinato
Timothy J Steiner
Publication date
01-12-2024
Publisher
Springer Milan
Published in
The Journal of Headache and Pain / Issue 1/2024
Print ISSN: 1129-2369
Electronic ISSN: 1129-2377
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s10194-024-01760-z

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