Women, Elderly and Rural Americans More Likely to Have Chronic Pain
By Crystal Lindell
American women are more likely than men to experience chronic pain and high-impact pain severe enough to disrupt their lives. Americans of both sexes are also more likely to have pain if they live in rural areas, are over age 65, and of American Indian or Alaska Native descent.
Those are the findings in a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which found that 24.3% of U.S. adults (60 million people) experienced chronic pain in 2023, while 8.5% (21 million) experienced high-impact pain that limited their daily life and work activities.
What the report doesn’t tell you is that pain rates have risen dramatically since 2016, the year the CDC introduced its controversial opioid prescribing guideline, which drastically reduced patient access to opioids. Not only has the guideline failed to reduce overdoses, it appears to have worsened pain care for millions of Americans.
In 2016, the National Health Interview Survey estimated that 20.4% (50.0 million) of U.S. adults had chronic pain, while 8% (19.6 million) had high-impact chronic pain. What that essentially means is that 10 million more Americans have chronic pain today than in 2016, and 1.4 million more people have debilitating pain.
The CDC report does not speculate about why pain rates have increased, but a recent study that looked at the same survey data offers some insight, suggesting the increase is due to a number of factors, such as long Covid, more sedentary lifestyles, more anxiety and stress, and reduced access to healthcare.
“The widely-cited 20% prevalence of CP (chronic pain) in the adult US population appears obsolete,” wrote co-authors Anna Zajacova, PhD, and Hanna Grol-Prokopczyk, PhD, in medRxiv. “Our findings indicated that chronic pain, already a widespread issue, has reached new heights in the post-pandemic era, necessitating urgent attention and intervention strategies to address and alleviate this growing health crisis.”
While the CDC report neglects to cover the causes of pain, it does provide a detailed look at chronic pain rates by sex, race, age, and location. For example, researchers found that people aged 65 and older are three times more likely to have chronic pain than young adults, while Whites are more likely to have pain than Blacks, Hispanics and Asians.
Chronic and High-Impact Pain by Sex:
Women: 25.4% and 9.6%
Men: 23.2% and 7.3%
Chronic and High-Impact Pain by Age:
Ages 18–29: 12.3% and 3.0%
Ages 30–44: 18.3% and 4.9%
Ages 45–64: 28.7% and 11.3%
Ages 65 and older: 36% and 13.5%
Chronic and High-Impact Pain by Race:
American Indian and Alaska Native: 30.7% and 12.7%
White: 28% and 9.5%
Black: 21.7% and 8.7%
Hispanic: 17.1% and 6.5%
Asian: 11.8% and 2.6%
Whether you live in a city, suburb or rural area also affects pain rates, with rural Americans significantly more likely to have chronic pain than those who live in cities. In the CDC study, large metropolitan areas of one million or more people are categorized as “central” or “fringe” counties. Medium and small metropolitan areas are counties with 250,000–999,999 people or less than 250,000 people, respectively. Non-metropolitan areas are rural counties with significantly fewer people.
Chronic Pain by Urban Area:
Large central metropolitan area: 20.5%
Large fringe metropolitan area: 22.5%
Medium and small metropolitan area: 26.4%
Non-metropolitan area: 31.4%
The CDC does not address the impact of chronic pain in its bare-bones report. But independent researchers Anna Zajacova and Hanna Grol-Prokopczyk do in their analysis, pointing out that pain “profoundly impacts” physical, mental and cognitive health, as well as employment, relationships, sexual function and sleep. It all adds up to an economic impact of $560-$635 billion annually — more than any other health condition.
“The findings are a call to action for public health professionals, policymakers, and researchers to further investigate the root causes of this increase. Addressing the rise in chronic pain is critical, as pain serves as a sensitive barometer of population health and has profound economic, social, and health consequences,” they wrote.