Mental health and medicine use for headache: National representative
study of adolescents in Denmark
Abstract
Purpose: To present the prevalence of medicine use for headache
in a nationally representative sample of adolescents in Denmark, and to
examine the association between poor mental health, frequent headache,
and medicine use for headache. Our hypothesis was that poor mental
health increases the risk of headache which triggers medicine use for
headache. Methods: The Danish arm of the 2022 Health Behaviour
in School-aged Children (HBSC) study included 5,767 11-, 13- and
15-year-old students with self-reported data about headache frequency,
medicine use for headache, and five indicators of mental health: Life
satisfaction, emotional symptoms, loneliness, self-efficacy, and
self-esteem. We used multivariate logistic regression analyses to
examine whether the indicators of mental health were associated with
medicine use for headache and whether inclusion of headache frequency in
the statistical models changed the associations. Results: The
prevalence of headache at least weekly was 32.7%. In the last month,
42.7% had used medicine for headache. Students with poor mental health
had significantly higher rates of headache and significantly higher
rates of medicine use for headache. For example, the OR (95% CI) for
medicine use for headache was 2.27 (1.90-2.72) among students with low
life satisfaction. When headache frequency was included in the
statistical models, the associations between poor mental health and
medicine use for headache attenuated and became insignificant. For
example, the OR for medicine use for headache attenuated to 1.18
(0.96-1.41) among students with low life satisfaction.
Conclusions: Poor mental health was associated with medicine
use for headache. Poor mental health was also associated with frequent
headache. The analyses suggest that frequent headache may be the
explanatory factor behind the association between poor mental health and
medicine use for headache. There is a need for promotion of rational
medicine use among adolescents and mental health promotion may
contribute to this effort.