How Being Inside or Outside of Buildings Affects the Causal Relationship between Weather and Pain among People Living with Chronic Pain

Author:

Little Claire L.1,Schultz David M.2ORCID,Yimer Belay B.1,Beukenhorst Anna L.3

Affiliation:

1. a Centre for Epidemiology Versus Arthritis, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom

2. b Centre for Atmospheric Science, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom

3. c Department of Biostatistics, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts

Abstract

Abstract Although many people believe their pain fluctuates with weather conditions, both weather and pain may be associated with time spent outside. For example, pleasant weather may mean that people spend more time outside doing physical activity and are exposed to the weather, leading to more (or less) pain, and poor weather or severe pain may keep people inside, sedentary, and not exposed to the weather. We conducted a smartphone study where participants with chronic pain reported daily pain severity, as well as time spent outside. We address the relationship between four weather variables (temperature, dewpoint temperature, pressure, and wind speed) and pain by proposing a three-step approach to untangle their effects: (i) propose a set of plausible directed acyclic graphs (DAGs) that account for potential roles of time spent outside (e.g., collider, effect modifier, mediator); (ii) analyze the compatibility of the observed data with the assumed model; and (iii) identify the most plausible model by combining evidence from the observed data and domain-specific knowledge. We found that the data do not support time spent outside as a collider or mediator of the relationship between weather variables and pain. On the other hand, time spent outside modifies the effect between temperature and pain, as well as wind speed and pain, with the effect being absent on days that participants spent inside and present if they spent some or all of the day outside. Our results show the utility of using directed acyclic graphs for studying causal inference. Significance Statement Three-quarters of people living with chronic pain believe that weather influences their pain. However, people staying inside would not be exposed to the weather outside, and good weather may mean that people are more active outside, leading to more or less pain. To obtain data to calculate how the amount of time spent outside affects the weather–pain relationship, we conducted a 15-month smartphone study collecting daily pain reports and nearby weather for nearly 5000 participants in the United Kingdom. We found that time spent outside modifies the relationship between temperature/wind speed and pain, showing the importance of accounting for other factors when investigating the association between weather and chronic pain, which could guide future research into pain mitigation and management.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Versus Arthritis

Natural Environment Research Council

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Reference30 articles.

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3. Beukenhorst, A. L., D. M. Schultz, J. McBeth, R. Lakshminarayana, J. C. Sergeant, and W. G. Dixon, 2017: Using smartphones for research outside clinical settings: How operating systems, app developers, and users determine geolocation data quality in mHealth studies. MEDINFO 2017: Precision Healthcare through Informatics, A. V. Gundlapalli et al., Eds., IOS Press, 10–14, https://doi.org/10.3233/978-1-61499-830-3-10.

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