Quality of psoriasis care in Germany--results of the national study PsoHealth 2007.

Standard

Quality of psoriasis care in Germany--results of the national study PsoHealth 2007. / Augustin, Matthias; Reich, Kristian; Reich, Christine; Purwins, Sandra; Stephan, Jeff Rustenbach; Schäfer, Ines; Radtke, Marc.

in: J DTSCH DERMATOL GES, Jahrgang 6, Nr. 8, 8, 2008, S. 640-645.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Augustin, M, Reich, K, Reich, C, Purwins, S, Stephan, JR, Schäfer, I & Radtke, M 2008, 'Quality of psoriasis care in Germany--results of the national study PsoHealth 2007.', J DTSCH DERMATOL GES, Jg. 6, Nr. 8, 8, S. 640-645. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18801145?dopt=Citation>

APA

Augustin, M., Reich, K., Reich, C., Purwins, S., Stephan, J. R., Schäfer, I., & Radtke, M. (2008). Quality of psoriasis care in Germany--results of the national study PsoHealth 2007. J DTSCH DERMATOL GES, 6(8), 640-645. [8]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18801145?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Augustin M, Reich K, Reich C, Purwins S, Stephan JR, Schäfer I et al. Quality of psoriasis care in Germany--results of the national study PsoHealth 2007. J DTSCH DERMATOL GES. 2008;6(8):640-645. 8.

Bibtex

@article{115d8c4eeced4cddaa2d46dae0a58b22,
title = "Quality of psoriasis care in Germany--results of the national study PsoHealth 2007.",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Many different forms of treatment are available for psoriasis. The German standard is the national AWMF S3 guideline. A national survey on psoriasis care in 2005 indicated deficits in psoriasis care in Germany. AIM: Assessment of the health care situation of patients with psoriasis in Germany. METHODS: Nation-wide cross-sectional study, in 142 dermatological practices and clinics. The following data were documented: a) Doctor Questionnaire: Treatment, illnesses, clinical characteristics and severity (PASI). b) Patient Questionnaire: Quality of life (QoL), patient relevant therapeutic benefits and satisfaction with the quality of the care. A panel of experts developed and analyzed 8 criteria as indicators of the quality of care. RESULTS: Of the 2009 evaluated patients, 11.6% suffered from severe psoriasis (PASI > 20) and 27.4% from moderate psoriasis (PASI 10-20). The average PASI value was 10.1, and the DLQI 7.5. 32.2% of patients had a serious reduction in their QoL (DLQI > 10). The share of patients with preceding systemic therapy was 47.3%, in severe psoriasis 62.1%, while 20.1% of the patients had received inpatient treatment. The average number of days absent from work was 3.4. Compared to 2005, all 8 indicators improved. CONCLUSION: Significant numbers of psoriasis patients show serious quality of life reductions and high grades of clinical severity. In comparison to 2005, there has been a notable, nation-wide improvement in psoriasis care.",
author = "Matthias Augustin and Kristian Reich and Christine Reich and Sandra Purwins and Stephan, {Jeff Rustenbach} and Ines Sch{\"a}fer and Marc Radtke",
year = "2008",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "6",
pages = "640--645",
journal = "J DTSCH DERMATOL GES",
issn = "1610-0379",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Quality of psoriasis care in Germany--results of the national study PsoHealth 2007.

AU - Augustin, Matthias

AU - Reich, Kristian

AU - Reich, Christine

AU - Purwins, Sandra

AU - Stephan, Jeff Rustenbach

AU - Schäfer, Ines

AU - Radtke, Marc

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - BACKGROUND: Many different forms of treatment are available for psoriasis. The German standard is the national AWMF S3 guideline. A national survey on psoriasis care in 2005 indicated deficits in psoriasis care in Germany. AIM: Assessment of the health care situation of patients with psoriasis in Germany. METHODS: Nation-wide cross-sectional study, in 142 dermatological practices and clinics. The following data were documented: a) Doctor Questionnaire: Treatment, illnesses, clinical characteristics and severity (PASI). b) Patient Questionnaire: Quality of life (QoL), patient relevant therapeutic benefits and satisfaction with the quality of the care. A panel of experts developed and analyzed 8 criteria as indicators of the quality of care. RESULTS: Of the 2009 evaluated patients, 11.6% suffered from severe psoriasis (PASI > 20) and 27.4% from moderate psoriasis (PASI 10-20). The average PASI value was 10.1, and the DLQI 7.5. 32.2% of patients had a serious reduction in their QoL (DLQI > 10). The share of patients with preceding systemic therapy was 47.3%, in severe psoriasis 62.1%, while 20.1% of the patients had received inpatient treatment. The average number of days absent from work was 3.4. Compared to 2005, all 8 indicators improved. CONCLUSION: Significant numbers of psoriasis patients show serious quality of life reductions and high grades of clinical severity. In comparison to 2005, there has been a notable, nation-wide improvement in psoriasis care.

AB - BACKGROUND: Many different forms of treatment are available for psoriasis. The German standard is the national AWMF S3 guideline. A national survey on psoriasis care in 2005 indicated deficits in psoriasis care in Germany. AIM: Assessment of the health care situation of patients with psoriasis in Germany. METHODS: Nation-wide cross-sectional study, in 142 dermatological practices and clinics. The following data were documented: a) Doctor Questionnaire: Treatment, illnesses, clinical characteristics and severity (PASI). b) Patient Questionnaire: Quality of life (QoL), patient relevant therapeutic benefits and satisfaction with the quality of the care. A panel of experts developed and analyzed 8 criteria as indicators of the quality of care. RESULTS: Of the 2009 evaluated patients, 11.6% suffered from severe psoriasis (PASI > 20) and 27.4% from moderate psoriasis (PASI 10-20). The average PASI value was 10.1, and the DLQI 7.5. 32.2% of patients had a serious reduction in their QoL (DLQI > 10). The share of patients with preceding systemic therapy was 47.3%, in severe psoriasis 62.1%, while 20.1% of the patients had received inpatient treatment. The average number of days absent from work was 3.4. Compared to 2005, all 8 indicators improved. CONCLUSION: Significant numbers of psoriasis patients show serious quality of life reductions and high grades of clinical severity. In comparison to 2005, there has been a notable, nation-wide improvement in psoriasis care.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 6

SP - 640

EP - 645

JO - J DTSCH DERMATOL GES

JF - J DTSCH DERMATOL GES

SN - 1610-0379

IS - 8

M1 - 8

ER -