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Caroline A. Baan

Researcher at Tilburg University

Publications -  150
Citations -  5476

Caroline A. Baan is an academic researcher from Tilburg University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Population. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 145 publications receiving 4759 citations. Previous affiliations of Caroline A. Baan include Health Forecasting & Erasmus University Rotterdam.

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Depression and quality of life in patients with diabetes: a systematic review from the European depression in diabetes (EDID) research consortium.

TL;DR: Increased awareness and monitoring for depression is needed within different diabetes care settings, as generic and domain specific quality of life were found to be mild to moderately lower in the presence of depressive symptoms.
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Comorbidity in patients with diabetes mellitus: impact on medical health care utilization

TL;DR: Current single-disease approach of integrated diabetes care should be extended with additional care modules, which must be generic and include multiple diseases in order to meet the complex health care demands of patients with diabetes in the future.
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Diabetes in Europe: an update.

TL;DR: Modifiable risk factors such as obesity, physical inactivity, smoking behaviour (including secondhand smoking), environmental pollutants, psychosocial factors and socioeconomic deprivation could be tackled to reduce the incidence of type 2 diabetes in Europe.
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Performance of a predictive model to identify undiagnosed diabetes in a health care setting.

TL;DR: Using only information normally present in the files of a general practitioner, a predictive model was developed that performed similarly to one supplemented by information obtained from additional questions, making it easy to implement in the current health care setting.
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Multimorbidity of chronic diseases and health care utilization in general practice

TL;DR: Multimorbidity is associated with increased health care utilization in general practice, yet the increase declines per additional disease, while contact rates for specific combinations of diseases were lower than what would be expected on the basis of contact rates of the separate diseases.