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Family Practice Vol. 10, No. 2, 152-163
© Oxford University Press 1993


research-article

Socio-economic Factors, Health Care Consumption and Rating of Abdominal Symptom Severity. A Report from The Abdominal Symptom Study

LARS AGRÉUS

Uppsala University, Department of Family Medicine, Uppsab, and Primary Health Care Centre, Östhammar, Sweden

Correspondence to V 742 21 Östhammar, Sweden

A study of the abdominal/gastrointestinal symptom panorama in relation to socio-economic factors and health care consumption in the general population was performed in Osthammar, Sweden. A postal ques tionnaire was sent to a representative sample of the adult population In–1260). The response rate was 87%. The responders with symptoms (52.1%) subjectively rated their illness on visual analogue scales. All responders were classified as asymptomatic or having ‘minor’ or ‘major’ abdominal symptoms. Those having dyspepsia, reflux or irritable bowel syndrome were also ranked as ‘minors’ or ‘majors’. The proportion of subjects with abdominal/gastrointestinal complaints decreased with age, mainly due to a decrease of ‘major’ symptoms. Also, the proportion of complainers increased among the more educated. Those on sick leave and students had more and worse symptoms than the others, despite the former seldom stating abdominal discomfort as the main reason for sick listing. Fifty-five per cent of all persons reporting abdominal/gastrointestinal symptoms had at some time consulted a doctor because of such complaints, the proportion increasing with severity, as did drug consumption and the rate of previous abdominal operations, with appendectomy as an exception. The results show that it is possible to rank the illness along a severity dimension among persons with abdominal/gastrointestinal complaints in epidemiological research.


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