Acute bronchitis: course of symptoms and restrictions in patients' daily activities
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
- Vol. 13 (1) , 8-12
- https://doi.org/10.3109/02813439508996728
Abstract
To obtain information on the course of complaints and restrictions in daily activities of patients with acute bronchitis. Prospective study. General practice. Otherwise healthy persons over 16, who visited their GP with an acute cough with purulent sputum and/or auscultatory abnormalities. Recordings by patients on reasons for encounter, symptoms and restrictions in daily activities at entry, and one and two weeks after entry. 99 Patients were included, of whom 79 were suitable for further analysis. Discomfort caused by coughing and concern in the patient and his/her social environment were the main reasons why patients visited their general practitioner. Counting from the onset of the disease it took three to four weeks before most patients were well and able to perform all their usual daily activities again. In most cases acute bronchitis has considerable impact on patients' well-being and daily activities for some weeks.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Hagersville Tire Fire: Interpreting Risk through a Qualitative Research DesignQualitative Health Research, 1992
- Critical nursing behaviors in care for the dyingCancer Nursing, 1991
- Ethical reasoning associated with the feeding of terminally ill elderly cancer patientsCancer Nursing, 1990
- Ethical reasoning concerning, the feeding of terminally ill cancer patientsCancer Nursing, 1989
- Misteltoe (Iscador) Therapy in Stage Iv Renal Adenocarcinoma: A Phase II study in patients with measurable lung metastasesActa Oncologica, 1989
- Organizational defenses against the anxiety of terminal illness: A case studyDeath Education, 1984
- The Indignity of 'Death with Dignity'The Hastings Center Studies, 1974