AMERICAN MIGRAINE STUDY II – A TEN YEAR REPORT CARD ON THE STATE OF MIGRAINE

There are nearly 28 million people in the United States aged 12 and older – nearly 13 percent of the population – suffering from headaches that fit the medical definition of migraine established by the IHS.  This means one in every four U.S. households has a migraine sufferer.  More than half of these sufferers have never received a physician diagnosis and most are not receiving the most appropriate treatment, despite new and effective therapies designed specifically to treat the pain and symptoms of migraine.  There have been no dramatic changes in the way physicians approach the treatment of migraine in the last ten years.  

Key Findings

  • Total U.S. migraine prevalence was virtually the same in 1999 (12.6 percent of the total population aged 12 and older) vs. 1989 (12.1 percent).  However, the total number of sufferers has increased from 24 million in 1989 to 28 million in 1999.
  • One out of every four U.S. households has a migraine sufferer.  Since there have been significant advances in treatment, including the development of migraine specific therapies over the past 10 years, one might think the medical approach to migraine would have changed dramatically in that time.  It has not.  Six out of 10 sufferers continue to use over-the-counter (OTC) remedies exclusively to manage their headaches.  It also suggests physicians have not significantly changed their approach to migraine treatment despite the introduction of migraine specific therapies.
  • The continued high use of OTCs is even more surprising given the significant increase in the number of sufferers reporting a physician diagnosis (39 percent in 1989 vs. 48 percent in 1999).
  • Even diagnosed patients report a similar pattern of suffering compared with their undiagnosed counterparts, which highlights that appropriate treatment is a vital component of care.  Patients report these symptoms:
    • Throbbing pain (85 percent diagnosed vs. 85 percent undiagnosed)
    • Sensitivity to light (89 percent diagnosed vs. 72 percent undiagnosed)
    • Pain on one side of the head (64 percent diagnosed vs. 55 percent undiagnosed)
    • Nausea (80 percent diagnosed vs. 66 percent undiagnosed)
  • Many patients continue to suffer needlessly:
    • 80 percent of migraine sufferers say their headaches are severe or extremely severe
    • 41 percent of migraine sufferers report headache pain five or more days in the last three months
    • Migraine is misdiagnosed as tension (a catch-all phase) or sinus headache (a relatively rare condition) almost as frequently as it is correctly diagnosed
    • 39 percent of all migraine sufferers report migraine pain so severe they are forced to retreat to their beds – sometimes for days at a time
    • 38 percent suffer three years or more before being diagnosed with migraine by a physician
    • More than half (51 percent) of sufferers report a 50 percent or more reduction in work and/or school productivity; 66 percent report a 50 percent or more reduction in household work productivity
    • 24 percent of migraine sufferers report headaches so severe that they have sought emergency room care

    For more information visit http://www.headaches.org/consumer/presskit/FinalAMSIIFactSheet4-5.html

Leave a Comment