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Follow‐up Study

Acta Paediatrica, 1963
SummaryA follow‐up study has been made of 47 of the 54 children in the present series. The median length of the follow‐up period is 3 11/12 years.The mortality is 9 per cent; it includes no case of flutter.A recurrence of PT verified by ECG took place within one year of the primary attack in 1/3 of the cases. If both verified and unverified recurrences
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Follow-Up Studies in Obsessional Neurosis

Archives of General Psychiatry, 1969
The follow-up is the great exposer of truth, the rock on which many fine theories are wrecked and upon which better ones can be built; it is to the psychiatrist what the postmortem is to the physician. — P. D. Scott THE CAUSE of most medical and psychiatric illnesses is unknown. Even without knowledge of etiology, however, the physician can diagnose,
D W, Goodwin, S B, Guze, E, Robins
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Schizophrenia in Greenland: a follow‐up study

Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 1995
A total of 289 Greenlanders admitted for the first time to a mental hospital from 1980 to 1983, were followed for 7 years. Thirty‐seven patients, 24 men and 13 women, were diagnosed with schizophrenia at least once during the follow‐up period. The annual first admission rate per 100,000 was 41 for men and 23 for women.
I, Lynge, J, Jacobsen
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Follow-Up Studies

2010
If you want to study determinants (exposures) of the transition from healthy to diseased or death, or from diseased to non-diseased, you have to record the sequence of causes, treatments, and end points in time; you need to have longitudinal recordings in most situations.
Jørn Olsen   +3 more
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Vestibular Neuritis: a Follow-up Study

Acta Oto-Laryngologica, 1999
Seven to eight years after a disease period of vestibular neuritis 19 patients previously examined at our department were given a questionnaire about whether they had experienced any audiovestibular symptoms since they first fell ill. All 19 patients responded and 18 consented to participate in the long-term follow-up study. The patients were subjected
J, Bergenius, O, Perols
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The follow-up study

1991
Abstract A cluster of disease often initiates a case-control study, but a clustering of diseases could easily escape notice. Good record keeping or registers are often very helpful; but experience, intuition, or chance may play a role. You have a problem and you need a solution.
Jørn Olsen   +3 more
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Follow-up Study on Hemiarthroplasty of the Hip

Southern Medical Journal, 1979
This follow-up study on hemiarthroplasty of the hip evaluates the effectiveness of the treatment in various hip conditions. A total of 169 hemiarthroplasties of the hip were performed at the Medical College of Georgia from 1966 to 1972. Fifty-two patients were available for follow-up study in 1975.
S I, Naidu, D H, McQueen
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A Follow-up Study of Accident Neurosis

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1985
SummaryThirty five claimants with accident neurosis, in which there were gross perplexing somatic symptoms without demonstrable organic pathology were traced and followed-up in their homes, from one to seven years after compensation was received. Few claimants recovered and such recovery as did take place was unrelated to the time of compensation ...
M J, Tarsh, C, Royston
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The Follow-up Study

1980
The findings of this study of illegitimate and adopted children at the age of 11 come from data gathered for the National Child Development Study (NCDS). This is a follow-up study of approximately 16000 children born in the week 3–9 March 1958 and living in England, Wales and Scotland.
Lydia Lambert, Jane Streather
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The Chestnut Lodge Follow-up Study

Archives of General Psychiatry, 1984
Chestnut Lodge is a small, private psychiatric hospital in Rockville, Md, specializing in the long-term residential treatment of severely ill (and usually chronic) psychotic and borderline patients. Four hundred forty-six (72%) of the patients treated at Chestnut Lodge between 1950 and 1975 were followed up an average of 15 years later.
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