Prostate Cancer Prostatic Dis
January 2001
The objective of this work is to describe the profile of prevalent and incident populations suffering from lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) suggestive of benign prostatic obstruction (BPO) and to analyse the management of care by 620 general practitioners (GPs) in France in 1997 and 1998. Patient records were extracted from the THALES database. Special attention was given to the use of medical therapy and switch rates (ie change to another or combination with another drug).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOur primary objective in designing the first large-scale nationwide population-based survey in France was to assess the impact of perennial rhinitis on quality of life. Our secondary objective was to describe the use of drug treatment, including histamine H1 antagonists, in that population. A pollbase of 20,000 households was screened for symptoms of rhinitis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA national control-matched survey was conducted in France to evaluate the access of migraineurs to health care. A validated IHS criteria-based diagnostic procedure for screening was conducted in adults drawn from a sample of 6,000 households. A group of 650 subjects fulfilling the IHS criteria for migraine were matched by sex, age and activity status with a group of non-headache, non-migraine controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe concept of alexithymia was first proposed in the 1960's by Sifneos and Nemiah to describe personality traits originally found in psychosomatic patients but which have since been found in other types of patients (alcoholics, drug addicts, traumatic stress disorder patients, sociopaths) as well as in the general population. Etymologically, alexithymia signifies: incapacity to speak one's emotions (from the Greek: a, lack; lexis, word; thymos, sentiments). Alexithymia is not the impossibility of feeling one's emotions, but rather the impossibility of associating them with corresponding mental representations and thus verbalizing them.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDrug use was examined in a French general population adult sample from a household survey conducted in 1987-8 in a newly built town near Paris. Psychotropic drug use was measured by the percentage of subjects reporting their use during the past week. It was prominently represented by benzodiazepines (90% of psychotropic users), differed strongly between genders (4.
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