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Patient preferences and treatment safety for uncomplicated vulvovaginal candidiasis in primary health care.

Authors :
Del-Cura González I
García-de-Blas González F
Cuesta TS
Martín Fernández J
Del-Alamo Rodríguez JM
Escriva Ferrairo RA
Del Canto De-Hoyos Alonso M
Arenas LB
Barrientos RR
Wiesmann EC
De-Alba Romero C
Díaz YG
Rodríguez-Moñino AP
Teira BG
Del Pozo MS
Horcajuelo JF
Rojas Giraldo MJ
González PC
Vello Cuadrado RA
Uriarte BL
Yepes JS
Sanz YH
Iglesias Piñeiro MJ
Hernández ST
Alonso FG
González González AI
Fernández AS
Carballo C
López AR
Morales F
Martínez López D
Source :
BMC public health [BMC Public Health] 2011 Jan 31; Vol. 11, pp. 63. Date of Electronic Publication: 2011 Jan 31.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Background: Vaginitis is a common complaint in primary care. In uncomplicated candidal vaginitis, there are no differences in effectiveness between oral or vaginal treatment. Some studies describe that the preferred treatment is the oral one, but a Cochrane's review points out inconsistencies associated with the report of the preferred way that limit the use of such data. Risk factors associated with recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis still remain controversial.<br />Methods/design: This work describes a protocol of a multicentric prospective observational study with one year follow up, to describe the women's reasons and preferences to choose the way of administration (oral vs topical) in the treatment of not complicated candidal vaginitis. The number of women required is 765, they are chosen by consecutive sampling. All of whom are aged 16 and over with vaginal discharge and/or vaginal pruritus, diagnosed with not complicated vulvovaginitis in Primary Care in Madrid.The main outcome variable is the preferences of the patients in treatment choice; secondary outcome variables are time to symptoms relief and adverse reactions and the frequency of recurrent vulvovaginitis and the risk factors. In the statistical analysis, for the main objective will be descriptive for each of the variables, bivariant analysis and multivariate analysis (logistic regression).. The dependent variable being the type of treatment chosen (oral or topical) and the independent, the variables that after bivariant analysis, have been associated to the treatment preference.<br />Discussion: Clinical decisions, recommendations, and practice guidelines must not only attend to the best available evidence, but also to the values and preferences of the informed patient.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1471-2458
Volume :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BMC public health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
21281464
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-11-63