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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1041
    Keywords: diabetes ; therapy ; antidiabetic drugs ; therapeutic traditions ; questionnaire survey ; drug utilization ; international differences
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary A questionnaire survey was carried out to explore differences in the approach to treatment of patients with Type II diabetes between physicians in Northern Ireland, Norway and Sweden, and to discover to what extent it could account for the three-fold difference in drug use between the countries. A representative sample of 400 physicians in each country was asked to give their opinions on the choice of therapy for three model cases designed to cover the spectrum of treatment — from diet alone to insulin. Significantly more Swedish (65%) than Northern Irish (51%) and Norwegian (52%) doctors suggested diet alone for uncomplicated diabetes recently discovered in a middle aged, overweight man. For symptomatic diabetes in a 76 year old overweight woman with few retinal microaneurysms, the majority of physicians in all three countries suggested treatment with sulphonylureas. Biguanides were here a more common alternative in Northern Ireland than in Scandinavia. For suspected secondary treatment failure in a 63 year old woman with no signs of complications, insulin was suggested by 71% of the Norwegian doctors but only by 44 and 49% of those in Northern Ireland and Sweden, respectively. General practitioners tended to suggest oral treatment earlier and to maintain it longer than hospital physicians. The study has demonstrated significant differences in the approach to treatment of Type II diabetes mellitus between physicians in the three countries. However, the differences were more prominent in the choice of drugs than in the threshold of drug treatment. The results also fit with qualitative but not with quantitative differences in drug sales between the countries, suggesting that important differences may exist in the prevalence of clinically recognized Type II diabetes.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1041
    Keywords: hypertension ; hypertensive therapy ; drug utilization ; therapeutic traditions ; international differences
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary A questionnaire survey based on hypertension case histories was performed among a representative sample of 400 GP's and hospital doctors in Northern Ireland, Norway and Sweden, countries having markedly different utilization of antihypertensive drugs. We found a greater propensity to start antihypertensive drug treatment in Northern Ireland than in Norway and Sweden. This was true both in mild diastolic and isolated systolic hypertension. Yet the utilization of antihypertensive drugs in Sweden is about 60% higher than in Northern Ireland and 30% higher than in Norway. Swedish physicians preferred beta-blockers as their first choice to a greater extent than physicians in Northern Ireland and Norway who selected thiazides more often. In general, the choice of drugs agreed with the sales and prescribing patterns in the three countries. Besides providing more insight in therapeutic traditions the study indicates that the lower prescribing of antihypertensive drugs in Northern Ireland, and to some extent in Norway, compared to Sweden, might be due to differences in true or apparent morbidity.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    European journal of clinical pharmacology 38 (1990), S. 453-459 
    ISSN: 1432-1041
    Keywords: Drug utilization ; breast feeding ; smoking ; alcohol ; puerperium ; pharmacoepidemiology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary In a retrospective questionnaire survey of 885 women who had given birth 3–5 months before, fewer of those who were still breast-feeding at 4 months (n=645) were using drugs than those who had stopped breast-feeding before 4 months (n=240), during the 2 week period preceding registration. The average number of doses (Defined Daily Doses/1000 women/day) was 166 and 307, respectively, in that period. The number of doses taken was significantly associated with the use of oral contraceptive agents (p〈0.005) and young maternal age (p〈0.05). Most of the variation in drug use between breast-feeding and not breast-feeding mothers was probably due to the greater use of contraception by the latter. The number of drugs used per mother in the 4 month period seemed to be best predicted by her and her infant's disorders. Long-term medication in breast-feeding women included many drugs for which there is incomplete or no data about milk transfer, e.g. salbutamol, clemastine, dexchlorpheniramine, phenylpropanolamine, cromoglycate and levomepromazine. The disorders most extensively treated with drugs in this period were dyspepsia, haemorrhoids and inflammation of the breast. The finding that smoking was associated with early weaning and consumption of alcohol with prolonged breast-feeding calls for further investigation. More information on these drug and health issues to the breast-feeding mother is highly desirable.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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