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Patient Reported Differences in Dry Eye Disease between Men and Women: Impact, Management, and Patient Satisfaction
by
Uchino, Miki
, Semba, Richard D.
, Li, Jim Z.
, Schaumberg, Debra A.
, Christen, William G.
, Buring, Julie E.
in
Aged
/ Cancer
/ Cardiovascular disease
/ Diagnosis
/ Disease control
/ Disease prevention
/ Drug dosages
/ Dry Eye Syndromes - drug therapy
/ Dry Eye Syndromes - pathology
/ Epidemiology
/ Eye
/ Eye diseases
/ Fatty acids
/ Female
/ Gender differences
/ Health care
/ Health risk assessment
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical schools
/ Medical treatment
/ Men
/ Mens health
/ Occlusion
/ Occupational health
/ Odds Ratio
/ Omega-3 fatty acids
/ Pain
/ Patient satisfaction
/ Patient Satisfaction - statistics & numerical data
/ Physicians
/ Population
/ Population studies
/ Preventive medicine
/ Professionals
/ Public health
/ Questionnaires
/ Regression Analysis
/ Regression models
/ Risk factors
/ Sex Factors
/ Side effects
/ Studies
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Systematic review
/ Tears
/ Treatment Outcome
/ United States
/ Vitamin A
/ Well being
/ Womens health
2013
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Patient Reported Differences in Dry Eye Disease between Men and Women: Impact, Management, and Patient Satisfaction
by
Uchino, Miki
, Semba, Richard D.
, Li, Jim Z.
, Schaumberg, Debra A.
, Christen, William G.
, Buring, Julie E.
in
Aged
/ Cancer
/ Cardiovascular disease
/ Diagnosis
/ Disease control
/ Disease prevention
/ Drug dosages
/ Dry Eye Syndromes - drug therapy
/ Dry Eye Syndromes - pathology
/ Epidemiology
/ Eye
/ Eye diseases
/ Fatty acids
/ Female
/ Gender differences
/ Health care
/ Health risk assessment
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical schools
/ Medical treatment
/ Men
/ Mens health
/ Occlusion
/ Occupational health
/ Odds Ratio
/ Omega-3 fatty acids
/ Pain
/ Patient satisfaction
/ Patient Satisfaction - statistics & numerical data
/ Physicians
/ Population
/ Population studies
/ Preventive medicine
/ Professionals
/ Public health
/ Questionnaires
/ Regression Analysis
/ Regression models
/ Risk factors
/ Sex Factors
/ Side effects
/ Studies
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Systematic review
/ Tears
/ Treatment Outcome
/ United States
/ Vitamin A
/ Well being
/ Womens health
2013
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Patient Reported Differences in Dry Eye Disease between Men and Women: Impact, Management, and Patient Satisfaction
by
Uchino, Miki
, Semba, Richard D.
, Li, Jim Z.
, Schaumberg, Debra A.
, Christen, William G.
, Buring, Julie E.
in
Aged
/ Cancer
/ Cardiovascular disease
/ Diagnosis
/ Disease control
/ Disease prevention
/ Drug dosages
/ Dry Eye Syndromes - drug therapy
/ Dry Eye Syndromes - pathology
/ Epidemiology
/ Eye
/ Eye diseases
/ Fatty acids
/ Female
/ Gender differences
/ Health care
/ Health risk assessment
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical schools
/ Medical treatment
/ Men
/ Mens health
/ Occlusion
/ Occupational health
/ Odds Ratio
/ Omega-3 fatty acids
/ Pain
/ Patient satisfaction
/ Patient Satisfaction - statistics & numerical data
/ Physicians
/ Population
/ Population studies
/ Preventive medicine
/ Professionals
/ Public health
/ Questionnaires
/ Regression Analysis
/ Regression models
/ Risk factors
/ Sex Factors
/ Side effects
/ Studies
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Systematic review
/ Tears
/ Treatment Outcome
/ United States
/ Vitamin A
/ Well being
/ Womens health
2013
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Patient Reported Differences in Dry Eye Disease between Men and Women: Impact, Management, and Patient Satisfaction
Journal Article
Patient Reported Differences in Dry Eye Disease between Men and Women: Impact, Management, and Patient Satisfaction
2013
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Overview
Dry eye disease affects women twice as often as men, but there is little information on whether dry eye treatments, treatment satisfaction, or the impact of dry eye disease on patients' lives and vision might differ by sex.
Questionnaire survey of 4000 participants in the Women's Health Study and the Physicians' Health Studies I and II with a prior report of a diagnosis of DED.
Among participants who re-confirmed a diagnosis of dry eye disease, we assessed symptoms, treatments, patient satisfaction and impact of dry eye disease, and analyzed differences between men and women using regression models.
The final study population consisted of 1,518 women (mean age 70.7 years) and 581 men (mean age 76.7 years), with a mean reported duration of dry eye disease of 10.5 years and 10.1 years, respectively. The frequency and severity of dry eye disease symptoms were higher among women (each P<0.0001), and women reported a greater impact on everyday activities (P<0.0001). Women were more likely to use artificial tears (P<0.0001) use them more often (P<0.0001), and to use Restasis® (P<0.0001), omega-3 fatty acids (P=0.0006), and have punctal occlusion (P=0.005). Women spent more money per month on dry eye treatments (P<0.0001), but reported greater dissatisfaction with treatment side effects (P=0.001), and the amount of time before treatments started working (P=0.03).
These data show that dry eye disease is generally experienced as being more severe among women, having a greater impact on their self-assessed well-being.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
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