Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0598853 (
forgetting
)
3,232
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Non-attendance at out-patient clinics, although common, has received relatively little attention. A prospective study was undertaken to assess the extent of the problem of non-attendances of newly referred dermatological patients in a single dermatological out-patient clinic over a 12-month period. The overall non-attendance rate was found to be 19%. There were no apparent significant differences between the groups of attending and non-attending patients when compared statistically. A survey of those patients who failed to attend suggested that inadequate communication between the hospital and patients (17%) and patients
forgetting
their appointment date (23%) may be factors that are amenable to administrative changes.
Clin Exp
Dermatol
1994 Sep
PMID:An audit of the factors involved in new patient non-attendance in a dermatology out-patient department. 795 96
Chronic urticaria is above all a cutaneous disease, affecting the skin, a visible organ, which plays a privileged role in relational life. Like any chronic disease, it raises two principal problems: preservation of the quality of life and therapeutic compliance. In chronic urticaria, psychological factors intervene on several levels: the doctor-patient relationship, the urticarian crisis itself, the onset and/or the aggravation of the disease, and the psychosocial consequences of urticaria. The role of psychological factors in the onset and/or the aggravation of the disease is variously estimated, generally based on retrospective studies and without consensus between the authors. On the other hand, the psychosocial impact of the disease is regularly mentioned: 30 to 40 p. 100 of the patients presenting with an associated depressive state. Quality of life is especially impaired in case of an associated physical urticaria. These data plead in favour of taking into account the psychological factors involved in the disease in order to propose, combined with the classical treatments of chronic urticaria and before the use of heavier treatments, a psychological treatment, i.e. a prescription of psychotropic drugs (especially antidepressants), alone or associated to a psychotherapy (a relaxation technique for example), without
forgetting
health education sessions.
Ann
Dermatol
Venereol 2003 May
PMID:[Psychological factors in chronic urticaria]. 1284 12