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Farideh Sadeghian

Researcher at Shahroud University of Medical Sciences

Publications -  56
Citations -  1013

Farideh Sadeghian is an academic researcher from Shahroud University of Medical Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Low back pain & Population. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 46 publications receiving 862 citations. Previous affiliations of Farideh Sadeghian include Tehran University of Medical Sciences.

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The CUPID (Cultural and Psychosocial Influences on Disability) Study: Methods of Data Collection and Characteristics of Study Sample

David Coggon, +65 more
- 06 Jul 2012 - 
TL;DR: There was substantial heterogeneity between occupational groups in economic and psychosocial aspects of work; three- to five-fold variation in awareness of someone outside work with musculoskeletal pain; and more than ten-fold variations in the prevalence of adverse health beliefs about back and arm pain.
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Disabling musculoskeletal pain in working populations: is it the job, the person or the culture?

David Coggon, +60 more
- 01 Jun 2013 - 
TL;DR: Large international variation in the prevalence of disabling forearm and back pain among occupational groups carrying out similar tasks, which is only partially explained by the personal and socioeconomic risk factors that were analysed, is indicated.
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Patterns of multisite pain and associations with risk factors.

David Coggon, +55 more
- 01 Sep 2013 - 
TL;DR: Cross‐sectional data from the CUPID study supports the classification of pain at multiple anatomical sites simply by the number of sites affected, and suggests that extensive pain differs importantly in its associations with risk factors from pain that is limited to only a small number of anatomical sites.
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Descriptive Epidemiology of Somatising Tendency: Findings from the CUPID Study

Sergio Vargas-Prada, +59 more
- 29 Apr 2016 - 
TL;DR: This study supports the use of questions from the Brief Symptom Inventory as a method for measuring somatising tendency, and suggests that in adults of working age, it is a fairly stable trait.
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Classification of neck/shoulder pain in epidemiological research: a comparison of personal and occupational characteristics, disability, and prognosis among 12,195 workers from 18 countries

Leila Maria Mansano Sarquis, +60 more
- 01 May 2016 - 
TL;DR: In future epidemiological research that bases case definitions on symptoms, it would be useful to distinguish pain that is localised to the neck or shoulder from more generalised pain that happens to involve the neck/shoulder region.