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Tron Anders Moger

Researcher at University of Oslo

Publications -  69
Citations -  2145

Tron Anders Moger is an academic researcher from University of Oslo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Breast cancer. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 64 publications receiving 1879 citations. Previous affiliations of Tron Anders Moger include University of Washington.

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Polypharmacy as commonly defined is an indicator of limited value in the assessment of drug-related problems

TL;DR: The number of DRPs per patient was linearly related to the number of drugs used on admission, and to set a strict cut-off to identify polypharmacy and declare that using more than this number of drug represents a potential risk for occurrence ofDRPs, is of limited value when assessing DRPs in a clinical setting.
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The majority of hospitalised patients have drug-related problems: results from a prospective study in general hospitals

TL;DR: The number of drugs used and the number of clinical/pharmacological risk factors significantly and independently influenced the risk for DRPs, and the majority of hospitalised patients in Norway had DRPs.
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Relationships Between Balance and Cognition in Patients With Subjective Cognitive Impairment, Mild Cognitive Impairment, and Alzheimer Disease

TL;DR: The study findings indicate that all aspects of balance control deteriorate with increasing severity of cognitive impairment and that executive function plays an important role in balance control.
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Age-Incidence Curves of Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma Worldwide: Bimodality in Low-Risk Populations and Aetiologic Implications

TL;DR: Using data from 23 high-quality population-based cancer registries for the period 1983-1997, a key finding was the consistent pattern of bimodality that emerged across low-risk populations, irrespective of geographic location.
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Characteristics of drug-related problems discussed by hospital pharmacists in multidisciplinary teams

TL;DR: Both clinical significance of the DRP and patient characteristics influenced physician immediate acceptance rate and awareness of DRPs increases through participation of pharmacists in the multidisciplinary therapeutic hospital team.