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. 1998;17(2):139-43.
doi: 10.1007/BF01452261.

Does the French general practitioner correctly investigate and treat osteoporosis? Groupe Rhumatologique d'Etudes Cliniques de Midi-Pyrénées

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Does the French general practitioner correctly investigate and treat osteoporosis? Groupe Rhumatologique d'Etudes Cliniques de Midi-Pyrénées

M Laroche et al. Clin Rheumatol. 1998.

Abstract

In our region, more than half the patients with osteoporosis are investigated and treated by general practitioners. We carried out two surveys to discover whether the diagnosis and treatment of osteoporosis were correctly carried out by general practitioners in the Midi-Pyrénées region. The first survey concerned 85 patients who had been diagnosed with osteoporosis by their general practitioner. These patients were being seen for the first time in a hospital or private practice setting by a rheumatologist who completed a questionnaire based solely on the history taken from the patient and the records in the patient's possession. For the second survey, 200 general practitioners who had referred patients to the rheumatology department were sent a questionnaire on their management of osteoporosis. Fifty-two physicians completed and returned the questionnaire. More than half the general practitioners started treatment of osteoporosis without fractures on the basis of standard spinal X-rays where the radiologist suggested bone mineral loss. The initial biological investigation was correctly carried out by only 6% of physicians. Treatment was correctly prescribed in only 34% of cases of osteoporosis with fractures, 50% of osteoporosis without fractures and 50% of senile cortical osteoporosis.

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