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- Bertrand Graz, Mona Savoy, Thierry Buclin, and Eric Bonvin.
- Institut universitaire de médicine sociale et préventive - Unité d'évaluation des soins, Lausanne. bertrand.graz@chuv.ch
- Rev Med Suisse. 2014 Nov 26; 10 (452): 2285-8.
AbstractWhich treatments are used for dysmenorrhea and with what reported outcome? A questionnaire was sent to 2400 students and apprentices, following the "retrospective treatment-outcome" method. The response rate was 22%. Most frequent treatments used are ibuprofene (53%), paracetamol (51%), hormonal contraception (40%), hot-water bottle (or hot pad) (35%), food supplements or medicinal plants (23%). Physicians only discuss a tiny proportion of dysmenorrhea treatment in their consultation, because it is mostly a matter of self-treatment, with the family as the source of information in 80% of the cases. Rather surprising because not mentioned in most official guidelines, hot-water bottle (or hot pad) appears as the treatment followed by the best reported outcome (satisfactory in 92% of users).
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