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Thomas Kohlmann

Researcher at Greifswald University Hospital

Publications -  280
Citations -  11372

Thomas Kohlmann is an academic researcher from Greifswald University Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Back pain. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 267 publications receiving 9562 citations. Previous affiliations of Thomas Kohlmann include University of Greifswald & University of Lübeck.

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Interim Scoring for the EQ-5D-5L: Mapping the EQ-5D-5L to EQ-5D-3L Value Sets

TL;DR: The nonparametric model was preferred for its simplicity while performing similarly to the other models, and being independent of the value set that is used, it can be applied to transform any EQ-5D-3L value set into EQ- 5D-5L index values.
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Cohort Profile: The Study of Health in Pomerania

TL;DR: Henry Volzke, y Dietrich Alte,1y Carsten Oliver Schmidt, Dorte Radke, Roberto Lorbeer, Nele Friedrich, Nicole Aumann, Katharina Lau, Michael Piontek, Gabriele Born, Christoph Havemann, Till Ittermann, Sabine Schipf, Robin Haring, Sebastian E Baumeister, Henri Wallaschofski, Matthias Nauck, Stephanie Frick, Andreas Arnold.
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Systematic literature review and validity evaluation of the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) and the Multiple Sclerosis Functional Composite (MSFC) in patients with multiple sclerosis

TL;DR: Both EDSS and MSFC are suitable to detect the effectiveness of clinical interventions and to monitor disease progression and the methodological criterion of validity applies sufficiently for both instruments.
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Costs of back pain in Germany

TL;DR: Male gender, increasing age, single status, low education, unemployment, and increasing back pain grade had a significant positive impact on the cost magnitude in multivariate analysis, providing important information concerning the relevance of back pain as a health problem and its socioeconomic consequences.
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Back pain in the German adult population: prevalence, severity, and sociodemographic correlates in a multiregional survey.

TL;DR: A population-based cross-sectional multiregion postal survey was used to provide a descriptive epidemiology of the prevalence and severity of back pain in German adults and to analyze sociodemographic correlates for disabling back pain within and across regions.