72
Mostly True
United States
The website reports that an NIH study has found high rates of persistent chronic pain among U.S. adults and provides the first nationwide estimates on the incidence of new chronic pain cases.
The claims regarding the NIH study on chronic pain are generally supported by the evidence. The first claim about high rates of persistent chronic pain among U.S. adults is corroborated by a reliable source from the NIH, leading to a high factScore. The second claim about the data being the first nationwide estimates is less directly supported, as the evidence provides prevalence data but does not explicitly confirm it as the first estimate. Overall, the claims are mostly factual, with a score reflecting the strength of the evidence.
Individual Claims
79
Mostly True
Health
NIH study finds high rates of persistent chronic pain among U.S. adults.
The claim is supported by a web source from the NIH, which reports that a study found high rates of persistent chronic pain among U.S. adults. This aligns with the evidence provided, indicating that chronic pain affects about 21% of U.S. adults, with high-impact cases at 8%.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
90
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
85
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
80
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
79
Evidence Summary
1 web source (NIH) corroborates the claim.
65
Mostly True
Health
Data are the first nationwide estimates on the incidence of new chronic pain cases.
The evidence does not explicitly confirm that these are the first nationwide estimates, but it does provide data on chronic pain prevalence. The claim is partially supported by the evidence showing chronic pain prevalence data from multiple sources, but no explicit statement about it being the first estimate.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
65
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
70
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
60
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
65
Evidence Summary
2 web sources provide data on chronic pain prevalence but do not confirm it as the first nationwide estimate.