Abstract
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Our recent estimate of the global 1-year prevalence of headache among those aged 18-65 years was 65%: considerably higher than previous estimates, but based solely on high-quality epidemiological data derived from a large population-based sample. Here we present complementary estimates of 1-day prevalence. METHODS: We performed a meta-analysis of individual participant data from cross-sectional surveys among population-representative samples (age range 18-65 years) from 15 countries and all world regions. All used the Headache-Attributed Restriction, Disability, Social Handicap and Impaired Participation (HARDSHIP) questionnaire, including the question "did you have a headache yesterday?", from which 1-day prevalence was determined. An algorithmic process applying modified ICHD criteria yielded separate estimates for migraine, tension-type headache (TTH) and probable medication-overuse headache (pMOH: the association of headache on ≥ 15 days/month and medication overuse). We analysed associations with age, gender and country-income level, and adjusted prevalence estimates for these factors. We calculated predicted 1-day prevalence from 1-year prevalence and reported headache frequency. RESULTS: Among the 38,512 participants, females (53.4%) and participants from low- (17.1%) or lower-middle-income countries (64.6%) were overrepresented, but age distribution fairly matched that of the world. Overall, 13.7% (95% CI: 13.3-14.0) reported headache yesterday, females (17.1% [16.6-17.6]) more than males (9.7% [9.3-10.2]). Migraine was the most common headache type yesterday (6.0% [5.8-6.3]), followed by TTH (4.1% [3.9-4.3]) and pMOH (2.3% [2.2-2.5]). One-day headache prevalence was higher in low/lower-middle-income countries (13.9% [13.6-14.3]) than in high/upper-middle-income countries (12.4% [11.6-13.2]). Predicted 1-day prevalence (10.9% [10.7-11.1]) was considerably lower than observed 1-day prevalence (13.7% [13.3-14.0]), although not among those with pMOH (3.1% [3.0-3.3] versus 2.3% [2.2-2.5]). Adjusted for age, gender and country-income level, global 1-day prevalence estimates were 13.1% (12.8-13.5) for any headache, 5.7% (5.5-5.9) for migraine, 3.9% (3.7-4.1) for TTH and 2.4% (2.3-2.6) for pMOH, with 1.0% undiagnosed. CONCLUSION: Assuming yesterday was no different from any other day, an estimated 13.1% (N = 641,900,000) of the world's population aged 18-65 years will have headache tomorrow; almost half will be migraine. People with migraine or TTH underestimate the frequency of headache episodes. Since headache-attributed burden is usually estimated from recalled frequency over 1-12 months, this also may be underestimated.
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@article{Maiga2026Over,
title = {Over 600 million people aged 18–65 will have headache tomorrow: global 1-day prevalence and recall bias from a meta-analysis of individual participant data (N = 38,512) from the general populations of 15 countries},
author = {Youssoufa Maiga and Robert P. Cowan and Mattias Linde and Ajay Risal and Debashish Chowdhury and Krishnan Anand and Andreas Husøy and Shengyuan Yu and Ruozhuo Liu and Akbar A. Herekar and Bilal Ahmed and Arif Herekar and Callixte Kuate Tegueu and Anastase Dzudie Tamdja and Annick Mélanie Magnerou and Najib Kissani and Latifa Adarmouch and Thierry Adoukonou and Mendinatou Agbétou and Oyéné Kossi and Mehila Zebenigus and Redda Tekle-Haimanot and D Worku and Girish N. Rao and GirishB Kulkarni and Gopalkrishna Gururaj and Mohammed Al Jumah and Ali M. Al Khathaami and Suliman Kojan and Guiovanna Quispe and Carlos Palomino-Diaz and Ashish Duggal and Otgonbayar Luvsannorov and Dorjkhand Baldorj and Selenge Enkhtuya and Ilya Ayzenberg and Zaza Katsarava and Gretchen L. Birbeck and Daiva Rastenytė and Lars Jacob Stovner and Timothy J. Steiner},
journal = {The Journal of Headache and Pain},
year = {2026},
doi = {10.1186/s10194-026-02359-2},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1186/s10194-026-02359-2}
}
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