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Showing papers on "Prevalence published in 1994"


Journal Article
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present data on lifetime and annual prevalence rates, age at onset, symptom profiles, and comorbidity of obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), using DSM-III criteria, from community surveys in seven countries: United States, Canada, Puerto Rico, Germany, Taiwan, Korea, and New Zealand.
Abstract: Data on the epidemiology of psychiatric disorders from different parts of the world using similar methods and diagnostic criteria have previously not been available. This article presents data on lifetime and annual prevalence rates, age at onset, symptom profiles, and comorbidity of obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), using DSM-III criteria, from community surveys in seven countries: the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico, Germany, Taiwan, Korea, and New Zealand. The OCD annual prevalence rates are remarkably consistent among these countries, ranging from 1.1/100 in Korea and New Zealand to 1.8/100 in Puerto Rico. The only exception is Taiwan (0.4/100), which has the lowest prevalence rates for all psychiatric disorders

656 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In those subjects with alcohol abuse, viral infection, especially hepatitis C virus, played an important role in the deterioration of chronic liver disease and its progression to hepatocellular carcinoma.

510 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: The data suggest that the prevalence of asthma among inner-city children may be substantially higher than the rates for this group estimated from national survey data and that a large number of children with asthma may be inadequately diagnosed and treated.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE To estimate the prevalence of asthma and wheezing unassociated with a diagnosis of asthma among inner-city children. DESIGN Cross-sectional survey of a sample of Bronx households. METHODS Random digit dialing telephone survey using parental report. SETTING Bronx County, NY. PARTICIPANTS 662 self-designated heads-of-household who reported for all children 0 through 17 years of age living in their households. MEASUREMENTS Questions from the Child Health Supplement to the 1988 National Health Interview Survey and the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease Bronchial Symptoms Questionnaire were used to estimate the prevalence of asthma and wheezing-related illness. RESULTS Information was gathered on 1285 children. Of this sample, 184 (14.3%) were reported to have ever had asthma (cumulative prevalence) and 111 (8.6%) were reported to have asthma in the last 12 months (period prevalence). The asthma period prevalence rate among Bronx children was twice the United States rate (4.3%). Among children 0 through 11 years of age, the prevalence rate was similar for boys and girls, although among children 12 through 17 years of age, asthma was significantly more prevalent among boys. Fifty-four children (4.2%) were reported to have had wheezing in the past 12 months unassociated with a diagnosis of asthma (wheeze only). The cumulative, but not the period, prevalence rate of asthma differed significantly by income and race/ethnicity. The cumulative prevalence was significantly higher among Hispanics and children from the lowest income families. The prevalence of wheeze only (no reported history of asthma) was higher among whites (6.4%) and blacks (5.8%) than Hispanics (2.9%) (P < .1). The reported number of wheezing attacks and the average number of nights per week that sleep was disturbed by wheezing during the past year were similar for those with asthma and those with wheeze only, although severe attacks (wheezing severe enough to limit speech) were significantly more likely among those reported to have asthma (P < .001). The total asthma prevalence (period prevalence of asthma plus wheeze only) was 12.8% and was quite consistent across subgroups. CONCLUSIONS These data suggest that the prevalence of asthma among inner-city children may be substantially higher than the rates for this group estimated from national survey data. Some proportion of the wheeze only group may represent undiagnosed, and thereby undertreated, asthma. Public health efforts directed at reducing asthma morbidity and mortality need to address the possibility that asthma prevalence is higher within inner cities and that a large number of children with asthma may be inadequately diagnosed and treated.

328 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Children who have multiple conditions of a chronic nature, even if few in number, have increased morbidity across a variety of measures.

215 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The mortality in 15 villages in South-West Uganda was studied in relation to HIV infection and showed the strong impact that HIV-1 infection is having on mortality in a rural area of Uganda where the overall HIV- 1 adult prevalence rate is below 10%--a rate lower than in many other parts of East Africa.

149 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The prevalence of abdominal symptoms was studied by means of a postal questionnaire sent to a representative sample of the adult population of a Swedish municipality and it was found that most of the complaints are of functional origin.
Abstract: The prevalence of abdominal symptoms was studied by means of a postal questionnaire sent to a representative sample (n = 1290) of the adult population of a Swedish municipality. The subjects were asked about the occurrence of 35 abdominal symptoms during the preceding 3 months. The participation rate was 89.6%, and 54.3% of the responders reported at least one discomforting abdominal symptom. The overall prevalence rate was significantly higher in women than in men, and the highest rate (75%) was found among young women. The average number of symptoms per individual was also significantly higher in women. The overall prevalence rate in women decreased significantly with age, irrespective of menopause. The prevalence of most individual symptoms decreased with age and/or was higher in women. However, the prevalence of symptoms indicative of gastro-oesophageal reflux disease did not vary with age or sex. The prevalence of symptoms usually regarded as ominous did not increase with age; in some instances it even decreased. With the exception of reflux symptoms and night pain, the apparent disappearance with increasing age implies that most of the complaints are of functional origin.

145 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Chronic ulceration of the leg is a common recurrent problem in the elderly population and is likely to increase as the population grows, and there is a definite need to improve the method of treating this problem.
Abstract: The aim of this study was to determine the point prevalence of ulceration of the leg in an Australian community. This was a population-based epidemiological study. Two hundred and fifty-nine patients with leg ulceration were identified by health care professionals of all types working in hospitals and private practices, as well as by self referral from patients. The base population in the study area was 238,000. The following data were recorded: age, sex, site of ulceration, duration of ulceration, history of previous ulceration and patient mobility. The point prevalence was 0.11%. The male:female ratio was 1:1.9; however the age related prevalence was similar for both sexes. The age related prevalence of ulceration was similar to that found in two similarly conducted studies in the United Kingdom. The ulcers were a chronic problem with 24% having been present for more than 1 year. Thirty-five per cent of patients had had a problem of ulceration for more than 5 years and 20% had suffered 10 or more episodes of ulceration. Related immobility was a prominent factor with 45% of patients being housebound. Chronic ulceration of the leg is a common recurrent problem in the elderly population and is likely to increase as the population grows. There is a definite need to improve the method of treating this problem.

133 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The decrease in incidence and prevalence of RA in this population over such a short period implicates the involvement of an environmental factor(s), other than exogenous estrogens, in the pathogenesis of the disease.
Abstract: Objective. To evaluate temporal trends in the incidence of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Methods. Incident cases of RA were identified among a population-based cohort of Pima Indians in Arizona over the period 1965–1990. Results. Among 2,894 subjects, 78 incident cases of RA were identified. The age-adjusted incidence declined by 55% in men (Ptrend = 0.225), and by 57% in women (Ptrend = 0.017) after controlling for oral contraceptive or estrogen use and for pregnancy experience. During the same period, age-adjusted prevalence rates of active RA decreased by 29% in men (Ptrend = 0.63) and by 40% in women (Ptrend = 0.02). Fewer than 17% of subjects with known RA were taking slow-acting antirheumatic drugs (SAARDs) in 1990. Conclusion. The decrease in incidence and prevalence of RA in this population over such a short period implicates the involvement of an environmental factor(s), other than exogenous estrogens, in the pathogenesis of the disease. However, the possibility that the observed decrease might be explained by an increased use of SAARDs in subjects with RA cannot be excluded.

119 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: Microsporidiosis is a common cause of chronic diarrhea, malabsorption, and weight loss in AIDS patients and its epidemiological, clinical, and immunological characteristics were compared.

115 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results of this exploratory study indicate that all STDs included are common in this rural population and the high HSV-2 prevalence rate among adolescents suggests that HSV -2 may be an important risk factor for HIV-1 infection.
Abstract: The aim of the study was to determine in a rural population the age- and sex-specific prevalence and incidence rates of serological reactivity of 5 common sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and their association with HIV-1 antibody status. Of the adult population of two villages (529 adults aged 15 years or more) 294 provided an adequate blood specimen both on enrollment and at 12 months. The sera were tested at 3 collaborating laboratories for antibodies against HIV-1, Treponema pallidum, Haemophilus ducreyi, Chlamydia trachomatis and herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) and type 2 (HSV-2). A sample of 45 children were tested for HSV-1 and HSV-2. Seroprevalence rates in adults on enrollment were 7.8% for HIV-1, 10.8% for active syphilis, 10.4% for H. ducreyi, 66.0% for C. trachomatis, 91.2% for HSV-1 and 67.9% for HSV-2. Males were significantly more likely than females to be seropositive for H. ducreyi (15.6% versus 6.6%), but less likely to be HSV-2 antibody positive (57.0% versus 74.4%). Reactivity to H. ducreyi, C. trachomatis and HSV-2 rose with increasing age. In contrast, active syphilis showed no age trend. All STDs tended to be more common in those HIV-1 seropositive. Incidence rates over the 12 months were nil for HIV-1, 0.5% for syphilis, 1.2% for H. ducreyi, 11.3% for C. trachomatis, and 16.7% for HSV-2. The results of this exploratory study indicate that all STDs included are common in this rural population. The high HSV-2 prevalence rate among adolescents suggests that HSV-2 may be an important risk factor for HIV-1 infection.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

110 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The development in the prevalence of back pain, back diseases diagnosed by a physician, and joint pain were studied in Finland during the period 1978/9-1992 and the prevalence rates of the symptoms remained stationary through the time period.
Abstract: The development in the prevalence of back pain, back diseases diagnosed by a physician, and joint pain were studied in Finland during the period 1978/9-1992. The data consisted of annual surveys of representative national samples (n = 5000) of 15-64 year old Finns. The effects of sex, age-group, and study year on the proportions of those with a disorder were studied by logistic regression analyses. All prevalences increased with age. Symptoms were more common among women. The prevalence rates of the symptoms remained stationary through the time period. There were further no systematic changes in the prevalence of diagnosed back diseases. The lower prevalence levels from the year 1985 onwards were probably because of a change in the questionnaire layout, and the two periods were modelled separately. Possible reasons for the discrepancy between the present results and those from previous surveys in Finland are discussed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Compared with previous surveys this study shows a low incidence of systemic sclerosis and a high proportion of patients with limited cutaneous involvement, which is similar to that in the general population.
Abstract: OBJECTIVES--To investigate the incidence, prevalence and clinical features of systemic sclerosis (SS) in Iceland. METHODS--All patients diagnosed with SS from 1975-90 were included. Retrieval for the study began in 1980 and was carried out by computerised search from registers of all hospitals and health care clinics and death registration files, and with personal communication with doctors in Iceland. RESULTS--Over a 16 year period from 1975-90, 15 new cases were found with an incidence of 0.7 and 0.05/100,000, for females and males at risk respectively, and 0.38 for both sexes. At the end of 1990 there were 18 patients alive with SS, 13 with limited and five with diffuse cutaneous involvement. The age standardised prevalence was 11.9 and 1.5/100,000 for females and males at risk respectively. The crude prevalence rate for both sexes was 7.1/100,000. There were five deaths, two patients died of SS related causes, one had SS renal disease. The relative risk of death was similar to that in the general population. The calculated five year survival rate was 100% and the 10 year survival rate 81%. No HLA antigen association was found. CONCLUSION--Compared with previous surveys this study shows a low incidence of systemic sclerosis and a high proportion of patients with limited cutaneous involvement.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Out of the approximately 300 million head which constitute the bovine population in Latin America and the Caribbean, 80 million are found in countries where rates of Mycobacterium bovis infection are very low or nil, and another 220 million are in countries with either a moderate to high prevalance or where no recent information is available.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The relationship between the length of mature T. canis female worms and the proportion of body length occupied by the uterus was highly significant and the distribution of parasite burdens in both dogs and cats was overdispersed.
Abstract: A survey was undertaken to study the epidemiology of Toxocara spp. in 350 dogs and 181 cats. A prevalence of 82.6% was recorded for Toxocara canis and 42% for T. cati. The distribution of parasite burdens in both dogs and cats was overdispersed. The highest parasite prevalence rates and burdens were found in hosts of 12 to 24 weeks of age. No Toxocara parasites were found in cats between 0 to 4 weeks old. There was no significant difference in parasite prevalence between male and female dogs or between male and female cats. The relationships between host age and sex with parasite prevalence, burden and length are discussed. Female T. canis worms with mature ova and those with immature ova differed significantly with regard to their length. The relationship between the length of mature T. canis female worms and the proportion of body length occupied by the uterus was highly significant.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that cryptosporidial infection is ubiquitous, and is highly endemic in these impoverished communities in rural Anhui, China and Fortaleza, Brazil.
Abstract: A cluster-sampling, cross-sectional study was conducted for assessing the prevalence of Cryptosporidium infection in children less than 16 years of age from three villages, Dondian, Linshan, and Fuziyin, in rural Anhui in eastern China. Among 320 apparently healthy children less than 10 years of age from Dondian who had stool specimens collected, cryptosporidial oocysts were found in stools of three children from Dondian, and no positive specimens were found in 239 children studied from Linshan. In addition, a total of 610 serum samples from children in these three villages were tested for specific IgG antibody to Cryptosporidium with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and the prevalence rates were 42.3%, 51.7%, and 57.5%, respectively, in Dondian, Linshan, and Fuziyin. Seroprevalence increased progressively with age. No detectable antibody was found in infants between two and six months of age, and seropositivity steadily increased after one year of age. Among 36 sera from adults 15-60 years of age without diarrheal illness in Huanglu villages of rural Chaohu, 50% (18 of 36) were positive. As expected, a good correlation was found in the specific IgG antibody between the paired serum specimens from 30 matched mother-neonates who showed transplacental transfer of IgG. However, little or no IgM antibody was seen in the neonates even though several mothers had a positive anticryptosporidial IgM enzyme-linked immunoassay result. Forty randomly selected serum samples from children less than four years of age in a similarly impoverished semiurban community in Fortaleza, Brazil, where the majority of households also have pit toilets and shared community water supplies and 172 serum samples from patients one month to 29 years of age admitted to the University of Virginia Hospital without diarrhea were also examined. In Fortaleza, almost all children acquired antibody by their second year of life, demonstrating the high prevalence of this infection. In rural Anhui, only about half the children were infected by 5-7 years of age. The overall prevalence rate (16.9%) of seropositivity among children and young adults in Virginia was much lower than in China and Brazil. These results indicate that cryptosporidial infection is ubiquitous, and is highly endemic in these impoverished communities. The difference between China and Brazil may reflect earlier weaning, hygiene practices, poorer water or sanitation, multiple siblings in family and geographic environment in Brazil.

Journal Article
TL;DR: The contemporaneous prevalence of hypertension in Porto Alegre demonstrates that the prevalence rates have not decreased in the last 15 years and it was also shown an inadequate BP control in almost 50% of those under drug treatment, and the association of hypertension with well-known risk factors.
Abstract: PURPOSE To evaluate the contemporaneous prevalence of hypertension in Porto Alegre, RS, and its association with biological, socioeconomic and environmental factors. METHODS It was done an observational and analytical study with a cross-sectional design, of a representative sample of the adults of the urban region. The study was planned with a power to describe the main estimates with 0.5% confidence limits of +/- 2%. One thousand and ninety one individuals, selected at random in conglomerates and in a multiple stage process, were interviewed. The data were obtained in the domiciles through standardized questionnaires and physical examination. RESULTS The prevalence of hypertension, defined by blood pressure (BP) > or = 160/95 mmHg, was 12.6% (CI = 10.6 to 14.6). Considering as hypertensives the individuals with BP < 160/95 mmHg under drug treatment, the prevalence increased to 19.2% (CI = 16.9 to 21.5). The corresponding figures for the 140/90 mmHg criteria were 25.8% (CI = 23.2 to 28.4) and 29.8% (CI = 27.1 to 32.5). Among those using anti-hypertensive drugs (11%), 58.9 had BP < 160/95 mmHg and 35.5% < 140/90 mmHg; 57.7% of the hypertensives (160/95 criteria) were aware of diagnosis; 28% had body mass index above 27kg/m2, 15.5% consumed more than 30g per day of ethanol, 35.1% were smokers, and 17.8% ex-smokers. The prevalence increased with age and was higher in individuals with obesity, strong family history of hypertension, low education and in those which abused from alcoholic beverages. In a logistic regression model, these putative risk factors showed to be independent of others. CONCLUSION The contemporaneous prevalence of hypertension in Porto Alegre demonstrates that the prevalence rates have not decreased in the last 15 years. It was also shown an inadequate BP control in almost 50% of those under drug treatment, and finally, the association of hypertension with well-known risk factors.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 1994-Gut
TL;DR: Gastritis is a cohort phenomenon and its prevalence has fallen in Finland in the last 15 years, caused by a decline of the rate of H pylori acquisition in birth cohorts, particularly in childhood and adolescence (below age of 20).
Abstract: To investigate whether the occurrence of chronic gastritis (and Helicobacter pylori acquisition) has changed in Finland in the past 15 years, the prevalence rates of chronic gastritis in biopsy specimens in consecutive series of outpatients (aged 20 or more) who had undergone diagnostic upper gastrointestinal endoscopy in 1977 (702 patients), 1985 (1309 patients), or 1992 (1447 patients) were compared. The prevalences of gastritis in these series were also compared with that in a random sample (438 subjects) of people who underwent endoscopy in 1974-76. It seemed that the prevalence of gastritis was significantly lower in the outpatients in 1992 than in the random endoscopy sample in 1974-76. The reduction was most noticeable in young age groups (20-49 years) in which the decline was 38% (drop from 66% to 41%). In addition, it seemed that the prevalence of gastritis was very dissimilar in different birth cohorts. The prevalence was high (70-80%) in 1977, 1985, and 1992 in the cohorts born at the beginning of the century and lower (40-50%) in those born during later decades. The prevalence rates had remained unchanged in the same cohorts over the 15 years (from 1977 to 1992) suggesting that the people had mainly been infected with H pylori and contracted gastritis before the age of 20. In conclusion, gastritis is a cohort phenomenon and its prevalence has fallen in Finland in the last 15 years. This decrease is caused by a decline of the rate of H pylori acquisition in birth cohorts, particularly in childhood and adolescence (below age of 20).

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Five years of National Health Interview Survey data on white male workers were combined to provide a basis for estimating the prevalence of selected conditions and impairments among this subgroup of farmers, and crude prevalence rates were significantly elevated for farmers compared with other workers for cardiovascular diseases, arthritis, skin cancer, hearing loss, and amputations.
Abstract: Farmers in the United States suffer disproportionately from certain chronic diseases and impairments. This analysis estimated the prevalence of selected diseases among farmers and compared these rates with those for other US workers. Five years (1986-1990) of National Health Interview Survey data on white male workers were combined to provide a basis for estimating the prevalence of selected conditions and impairments among this subgroup. Crude prevalence rates were significantly elevated for farmers compared with other workers for cardiovascular diseases, arthritis, skin cancer, hearing loss, and amputations. These elevations persisted when farmers were compared with blue-collar workers. The crude prevalence of orthopedic impairments and chronic respiratory diseases was not elevated among farmers, but the age-adjusted prevalence ratios for cardiovascular diseases, arthritis, and amputations were significantly elevated for farmers as compared with other workers. The prevalence of hearing loss was significantly higher only for farmers older than 65 years. This method of pooling data holds promise for studying disease rates in other small segments of the US population. Language: en

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The patterns of infection were investigated using the relationships between prevalence, intensity, and variance within samples, and were found to be consistent with laboratory infections.
Abstract: Wild-caught Anopheles gambiae s. l. and An. funestus were dissected and their midguts were examined for the presence of Plasmodium falciparum oocyst infections. The mean intensity of infection and the prevalence of infected mosquitoes were determined for each sample, with one sample representing the mosquitoes caught in a single house at any given time. The patterns of infection were investigated using the relationships between prevalence, intensity, and variance within samples, and were found to be consistent with laboratory infections. The overall distribution of oocysts is characterized by a mixture of negative binomial distributions with means determined by the infectiousness of the human hosts, and a constant degree of aggregation (k = 0.0767) presumably determined by the development of oocysts within mosquitoes. The prevalence/intensity relationship was treated as a bivariate distribution to ascertain the effect of sample size on the accuracy of estimation, and to allow inference of intensity from prevalence. In mathematical models fitted to the collected data, sample size affected directly the minimum possible prevalence of infection, and the accuracy of both mean and prevalence estimations. Based on minimum possible positive prevalence rates, data from samples of less than 20–25 mosquitoes would provide unacceptable errors in prevalence estimations. However, natural oocyst rates are consistently higher than the minimum prevalence, and it is suggested that any interpretations from samples of less than approximately 40 mosquitoes must be treated with some caution. Such variation in natural samples means that prediction of intensity of infection from prevalence (or vice versa) is extremely inaccurate.

Journal Article
TL;DR: The comparable prevalence rates of IgG antibodies to Helicobacter pylori and hepatitis A virus, in different age groups, in India and in the West, suggest a feco-oral mode of transmission for Helicob bacteria.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE To determine the age-related prevalence of Helicobacter pylori antibodies in Indian subjects without upper gastrointestinal symptoms. MATERIAL AND METHODS Sera of 340 subjects without any upper gastrointestinal complaints were screened for IgG and IgA Helicobacter pylori antibodies by the ELISA technique. RESULTS The prevalence of IgG and IgA antibodies was 22%, 56% and 87% and 48%, 58% and 83% in 0-4, 5-9 and 10-19 year age groups respectively; thereafter it remained almost constant upto fifth decade. A significant fall in IgG and IgA prevalence was observed from fifth to seventh decades. CONCLUSION Our data indicate that in India exposure to Helicobacter pylori occurs early in life and is widespread; about 83% of the population is exposed to Helicobacter pylori during the first two decades of life. The comparable prevalence rates of IgG antibodies to Helicobacter pylori and hepatitis A virus, in different age groups, in India and in the West, suggest a feco-oral mode of transmission for Helicobacter pylori.

Journal ArticleDOI
M. Gómez-Beneyto1, A. Bonet1, M. A. Catalá1, E. Puche1, V. Vila1 
TL;DR: Global prevalence rates, rates by age and rates by sex, as well as rates of specific diagnosis according to DSM‐III‐R criteria are described.
Abstract: A 2-stage survey was carried out to establish the point-prevalence of mental disorders and help-seeking behaviour in children aged 8, 11 and 15 living in the city of Valencia. Global prevalence rates, rates by age and rates by sex, as well as rates of specific diagnosis according to DSM-III-R criteria are described. Help-seeking behaviour was found to be related to an interaction between internalizing and externalizing symptoms and sex.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The population survey in Kin-Hu, Kinmen, had a high response rate of 79% and the crude prevalence rate of diabetes was 6.5%, and the age-adjusted prevalence rate was 4.9%.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE To investigate the prevalence of non-insulin-dependent-diabetes mellitus in Kin-Hu, Kinmen. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS This is a community-based population survey. The target population are residents ≥30 years of age in Kin-Hu, Kinmen, according to the official household registry in 1990. Face to face interviews were conducted by the Yang-Ming Crusade in 1991 using a structured questionnaire. Fasting blood samples were drawn by public health nurses, and a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test was performed for definite diagnosis of diabetes. RESULTS ; There were 4,097 eligible subjects (2,026 men and 2,071 women), and 3,236 had complete fasting plasma glucose data (1,536 men and 1,700 women). The response rate was 79% (76% for men and 82% for women). The age-specific response rates were 81% for the 30- to 39-year and 50- to 59-year age-groups, 84% for the 40- to 49-year age-group, and 69% for the ≥60-year age-group. The crude prevalence of diabetes in Kin-Hu was 6.5% (2.0% previous and 4.5% new). With the standard world population of Segi, the age-adjusted prevalence rate was 4.9% (4.5% for men and 5.4% for women). The prevalence rate of diabetes increased significantly with age. The prevalence of previously diagnosed diabetes accounted for less than one third of the total rate. CONCLUSIONS The population survey in Kin-Hu, Kinmen, had a high response rate of 79%. The crude prevalence rate of diabetes was 6.5%, and the age-adjusted prevalence rate was 4.9%. The low ratio of previously diagnosed to newly diagnosed diabetic cases may be due to lack of public awareness and medical services in this community.

Journal Article
TL;DR: An increased prevalence of chronic bronchitis was observed in Gujjar females of a rural area of Kashmir valley in this study and was attributed to exposure to domestic smoke pollution, lower socio-economic status, illiteracy, poor housing conditions and overcrowding.
Abstract: An increased prevalence of chronic bronchitis (12.21%) was observed in Gujjar females of a rural area of Kashmir valley in this study. Screening of adult population of two randomly selected village showed an overall prevalence rate of 7.7% for chronic bronchitis and 1.96% for asthma. This increased prevalence of chronic bronchitis was attributed to exposure to domestic smoke pollution, lower socio-economic status, illiteracy, poor housing conditions and overcrowding.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The aim of the study was to document the frequency of neural tube defects (NTD) over a 20-year period in Cape Town and to determine the effects of race, gender, maternal age, parity and season of conception on the prevalence.
Abstract: The aim of the study was to document the frequency of neural tube defects (NTD) over a 20-year period in Cape Town and to determine the effects of race, gender, maternal age, parity, and season of conception on the prevalence. Multiple sources of ascertainment were used, including all maternity hospital records, neurosurgical and spinal defects clinic data, as well as those from the Human Genetics Department and Fetal Abnormality Group. The prevalence rates for NTD fluctuated between 1.74 and 0.63 per 1,000 births, but showed no significant trends over the 20-year period. Prevalence rates were highest for the white population group at 2.56 per 1,000 births compared to 0.95 per 1,000 for blacks and 1.05 per 1,000 for those of mixed ancestry. The higher rates in the whites, who are of British and European extraction and belong to the more affluent section of the community, would suggest that the possible effects of nutrition and infection are overshadowed by genetic factors. There was a female preponderance for both spina bifida (M: F ratio 0. 89) and anencephaly (M: F ratio 0. 67). The highest NTD rates were found at both ends of the maternal age range ( 35 years of age). The prevalence was highest at the extremes of birth order (1.65 and 1.58 for birth order 1and > 7, respectively, and 0.56 and 0.45 for birth order 5 and 6, respectively). A seasonal variation occurred which differed from that reported for the Northern Hemisphere and may reflect local climatic conditions. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The crude prevalence rate of MS in Vélez-Málaga was 53 per 100,000, twice as high as the prevalence previously reported in both the city and province of Ma⩽laga.
Abstract: Since little is known about the prevalence of multiple sclerosis (MS) in Spain, we undertook an epidemiologic study to ascertain the prevalence of MS in the Sanitary District of Velez-Malaga, close to the city of Malaga, in southern Spain. The crude prevalence rate of MS in Velez-Malaga was 53 per 100,000, twice as high as the prevalence previously reported in both the city and province of Malaga. The MS prevalence in the Sanitary District of Velez-Malaga is similar to that in Sicily and in Cyprus.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results indicate a tendency toward fewer personality disorders in older than young adults, no differences in the frequency of personality disorders between male and female elderly, and significantly more prior mental health consultations in elderly with personality disorders than in elderly without these disorders.
Abstract: There has been limited research on the prevalence of personality disorders in the aged. No studies have documented the extent of personality disorders in community-dwelling elderly with the use of a structured scale specifically designed to detect personality disorders and anchored to DSM-III-R criteria. One hundred male and 100 female community-living elderly (mean age, 72.1 years) were administered the Structured Interview for Disorders of Personality-Revised to compare prevalence rates for specific personality disorders with those of young adults (mean age, 41.7 years) and to identify demographic variables associated with personality disorders in the elderly. Results indicate a tendency toward fewer personality disorders in older than young adults, no differences in the frequency of personality disorders between male and female elderly, and significantly more prior mental health consultations in elderly with personality disorders than in elderly without these disorders. Aging processes and methodologic...

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Oct 1994-AIDS
TL;DR: HIV-1 prevalence in the Arusha region was higher among the urban population than among the rural population, and women living in urban areas with low socioeconomic status appeared to be associated with increased risk of HIV-1 infection.
Abstract: The objective of this study was to estimate HIV-1 prevalence among the adult population in the Arusha region northern Tanzania. This cross-sectional study included clusters of 10 households which were randomly selected from urban semi-urban and rural areas in the Arusha region. Informed verbal consent for participation in the interview and HIV-1 test were obtained from the respondents. HIV-1 antibodies were tested using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and all ELISA-positive sera were confirmed using Western blot. Approximately 66.0% of the eligible registered adults (aged 15-54 years) participated in the interview of whom 56.6% provided blood samples for HIV-1 testing. HIV-1 prevalence rates among the study population from the low and high socioeconomic status urban areas semi-urban area and rural villages were 10.7 5.2 2.2 and 1.6% respectively. HIV-1 prevalence was significantly higher among women (6.5%) than men (1.7%) and infection rates were consistently higher among women than men in all areas studied except in the rural village. Divorced and separated individuals had significantly higher HIV-1 prevalence (14.8%) compared with married and cohabiting individuals (4.0%). Significantly more individuals with multiple sexual partners reported regular condom use (19.3%) than those with one sexual partner (6.4%). HIV-1 prevalence in the Arusha region was higher among the urban population than among the rural population. Women living in urban areas with low socioeconomic status appeared to be associated with increased risk of HIV-1 infection. (authors)

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The incidence and prevalence of multiple sclerosis were compared, controlling for age, in native-born Israelis of different origins and in immigrants to Israel, pointing to both environmental and genetic factors in the aetiology of MS.
Abstract: The incidence and prevalence of multiple sclerosis (MS) were compared, controlling for age, in native-born Israelis of different origins and in immigrants to Israel. This comparison was carried out in two populations, countrywide and in Jerusalem. In the countrywide population, ascertainment was based mainly on hospitalizations; it included 252 patients who were native-born and 150 who had immigrated from Africa-Asia (AA immigrants). The 89 MS patients of Jerusalem also included patients diagnosed in outpatient clinics. In native-born Israelis whose father was born in Europe-America (I-EA), the incidence and prevalence of MS were found to be as high as or even higher than that found previously in immigrants from Europe-America. Among native-born Israelis whose father was born in Africa or Asia (I-AA), the yearly age-adjusted incidence and prevalence rates were found to be 1.4- to 1.8-fold higher than among AA immigrants, pointing to environmental factors. The incidence and prevalence rates in the I-EA were 1.2- to 1.6-fold higher than in the I-AA, pointing to genetic factors. These results seem to point to both environmental and genetic factors in the aetiology of MS. Further research is needed, however, to disentangle the genetic factors from possible environmental differences in the two ethnic groups.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that abdominal symptoms and the syndromes they constitute occur frequently and fluctuatingly in the elderly population.
Abstract: In 1984 a random sample of a 70-year-old Danish population of 1119 subjects was questioned about abdominal symptoms and 5 years later survivors were contacted for follow-up. The participation rate at the primary study was 72% and 91% of the surviving subjects attended the follow-up. One-year period prevalences of single symptoms were 1-40%, annual incidence values 1-25% and 5-year disappearance rates were more than 50%. Irritable bowel syndrome occurred with a prevalence of 6-18% depending on definition, and incidences were of a similar magnitude. At the 5-year follow-up 50-79% of subjects originally suffering from irritable bowel syndrome no longer did so. The annual prevalence rate of symptoms of upper dyspepsia varied from 9% to 25%, annual incidence was 3-12%, and cumulative 5-year disappearance rate 45-65%. It is concluded that abdominal symptoms and the syndromes they constitute occur frequently and fluctuatingly in the elderly population.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A recent point prevalence study suggested that there are variations in the reported rates possibly related to the under-reporting of pressure sore prevalence and the importance of standardizing the methods used for determining prevalence rates is discussed.
Abstract: Pressure sores result in patient morbidity and mortality as well as commanding considerable resources within the British National Health Service To assess the impact of preventive measures, accurate and reliable rates of prevalence and incidence are required This information is likely to be used as a measure of quality of care as well being included in future purchaser/provider contracting A number of prevalence studies have been carried out in the United Kingdom using a variety of populations and different methods The methods employed in these studies need to be considered before any meaningful comparisons can be drawn In particular, there are variations in the reported rates possibly related to the under-reporting of pressure sore prevalence This paper describes a recent point prevalence study which suggested that this may be the case The need for caution when comparing crude ratesis highlighted and the importance of standardizing the methods used for determining prevalence rates is discussed