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Study: 1 in 3 Adults Has Arthritis
Excerpt
By Daniel Yee, AP
ATLANTA (AP) -
Arthritis and other chronic joint problems are far more widespread
than estimated just five years ago, affecting one in three U.S.
adults, or 69.9 million people in all, the government said Thursday
in the first comprehensive survey of the disease.
Health officials and advocates said
the numbers and related health care costs are expected
to continue to rise as the baby boom generation reaches old age.
The survey shocked even advocates
for arthritis sufferers.
"We just think that's alarming in
terms of the number," said Tino Mantella, president of the Arthritis
Foundation.
The numbers were 63 percent higher
than a 1997 estimate that said about one in five U.S. adults,
or nearly 43 million in all, had arthritis and other chronic joint
problems.
The new survey by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention reflects, in part, a real increase
in arthritis, connected to the aging of the baby boomers. But
it also reflects a more thorough survey, the CDC said.
Previous estimates were much lower
because many people do not tell doctors about their joint pain,
and others do not consider their aches and pains to be arthritis,
officials said. The latest survey employed more penetrating questions.
A total of 212,000 people from all
50 states were interviewed by telephone and asked if, in the previous
year, they had pain, stiffness or swelling around a joint for
at least a month. About a third of those with arthritis-like symptoms
said they had not consulted a doctor about their symptoms.
"There are many people with chronic
joint symptoms who don't see a doctor," said Dr. Chad Helmick
of the CDC's arthritis program. The latest survey "is a better
way of capturing people who have always been out there with arthritis
or different symptoms."
The arthritis level ranged from 17.8
percent of adults in Hawaii to 42.6 percent of adults in West
Virginia. States in the central and northwestern parts of the
country had the highest rates.
Last year, arthritis patients cost the country about $80 billion
in medical care costs and lost work, health officials said.
People can reduce their risk of
arthritis through exercise, weight management and a healthy diet.
"The public has very little understanding
about arthritis," said Dr. John Klippel, medical director for
the Arthritis Foundation. "Many people associate arthritis with
the process of aging, they assume aches and pains are an inevitable
part of aging when in fact it is not a natural part of aging."
The survey confirmed previous studies
that indicated arthritis tends to rise with age and that it is
more common in women. In addition, arthritis is more common in
those who are overweight or physically inactive.
On the Net:
CDC survey: www.cdc.gov/mmwr
Arthritis Foundation: www.arthritis.org
Reference
Source 102
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