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Table of Contents
Widespread Pain Index (WPI)
The Widespread Pain Index quantifies the extent of bodily pain on a 0-19 scale by asking Lifelines participants if they have had pain or tenderness in 19 different body regions over the past week, with each painful or tender region scoring 1 point (section: Diseases & symptoms).
Note that pain was also assessed in Lifelines participants as a symptom of several specified medical conditions.
Background
The WPI originated as a part of the Fibromylagia Survey Questionnaire (FSQ) that sets diagnostic criteria for fibromyalgia. The full FSQ also contains a symptom severity score (SSS) for the following symptoms: fatigue, waking unrefreshed, cognitive symptoms and somatic symptoms 1). In Lifelines, this information can be derived from other variables (i.e. fatigue (general), Symtoms (SCL90), and various cognition-related variables).
This instrument is required for the diagnosis of fibromyalgia in epidemiological studies. Scoring above a cut-off on this scale is one of the three diagnostic criteria for fibromyalgia. Including it in the Lifelines screening will add to a new diagnosis in the Lifelines dataset. The presence of fibromyalgia is currently only questioned by self-report, but recent studies indicate that this methodology misses 77% of the fibromyalgia diagnoses 2).
Validity
A recent German study showed that the reliability, convergent and discriminant validity of the FSQ were good, however, the The WPI was not evaluated separately3).