Sami Fadhel Almalki, Maryam Anwar AlMuhaish, Joud Khalid Alghamdi, Najd Fahad Alqahtani, Hanan Saad Alnawmasi, Sayed Ibrahim Ali
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Insufficient recognition of ominous headache red flags delays specialized care for potentially life-threatening secondary pathologies. Population-level awareness in Saudi Arabia warrants assessment to guide public health planning. The aim of the study was to evaluate headache red flag knowledge and associated care-seeking attitudes among Saudi adults through a cross-sectional survey.
Methods: A multistage random sample of 643 Saudis aged 15-85 years was recruited proportionally across 13 regions from November 23, 2023 to February 14, 2024. A self-administered questionnaire assessed knowledge of 12 common red flags through closed responses. Total scores were calculated, and associations with demographic/clinical predictors were examined using statistics including Chi-square, ANOVA, and Bayesian correlations.
Results: Mean knowledge score was 11.73/24 indicating partial overall understanding. Higher scores correlated with male gender, ages 36-55 years, tertiary education, and prior headache histories. Knowledge of key red flags like "thunderclap headache" was incomplete. Timely specialist evaluation for concerning symptoms received limited endorsement over analgesic use. Vulnerable subgroups demonstrating low awareness included females, youth, and those reliant on unreliable hazard information sources.
Conclusion: Saudi adults demonstrated modest yet uneven headache red flag knowledge influenced by sociodemographic attributes. Specific deficits warrant targeted educational campaigns addressing individual and systemic barriers to prompt neurological evaluations for alarm symptoms. Public health efforts involving experts, community leaders, and technological innovations hold promise enhancing timely diagnosis of secondary pathologies nationwide if periodically monitored.
期刊介绍:
The Annals of African Medicine is published by the Usmanu Danfodiyo University Teaching Hospital, Sokoto, Nigeria and the Annals of African Medicine Society. The Journal is intended to serve as a medium for the publication of research findings in the broad field of Medicine in Africa and other developing countries, and elsewhere which have relevance to Africa. It will serve as a source of information on the state of the art of Medicine in Africa, for continuing education for doctors in Africa and other developing countries, and also for the publication of meetings and conferences. The journal will publish articles I any field of Medicine and other fields which have relevance or implications for Medicine.