Fear of falling (FoF) results in social, functional, physical, and psychological symptoms, including secondary disorders, such as depression and general anxiety disorder (GAD). A vicious cycle develops, where symptoms maintain and reinforce FoF and its consequences, including increasing the risk of falling. In this position paper, we suggest screening for FoF using the falls efficacy scale international (FES-I) questionnaire.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevention and screening recommendations have to be adapted on a regular basis to the latest scientific data and should be completed by tools made to facilitated the implication of patients in decision-making. The prevention and screening webpages hosted on the website of the Department of community medicine and ambulatory care of the University of Lausanne facilitate access to clinical recommendations identified by members of the five medical faculties in Switzerland (EviPrev national program), and to various information sources for physicians and patients, including patient decision aids. These webpages have been developed with primary care physicians who have participated in a pilot project in the canton of Vaud.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBecause of the worldwide aging of populations, Alzheimer's disease and other dementias constitute a devastating experience for patients and families as well as a major social and economic burden for both healthcare systems and society. Multiple potentially modifiable cardiovascular and lifestyle risk factors have been associated with this disease. Thus, modifying these risk factors and identifying protective factors represent important strategies to prevent and delay disease onset and to decrease the social burden.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevention and screening of diseases belong to the role of each primary care physician. Recommendations have been developed in the EviPrev programme, which brings together members of all five academic ambulatory general internal medicine centers in Switzerland (Lausanne, Bern, Geneva, Basel and Zürich). Several questions must be addressed before realising a prevention intervention: Do we have data demonstrating that early intervention or detection is effective? What are the efficacy and adverse effects of the intervention? What is the efficiency (cost-effectiveness) of the intervention? What are the patient's preferences concerning the intervention and its consequences? The recommendations aim at answering these questions independently, taking into account the Swiss context and integrating the patient's perspective in a shared decision-making encounter.
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