Background Associations between symptom experience and mortality have rarely been investigated. One study has suggested that the number of symptoms people experience may be an important predictor of mortality. This novel and potentially important finding may have important implications but needs to be tested in other cohorts. Methods 858 people aged around 58 years were interviewed by nurses in 1990/1 as part of the West of Scotland Twenty-07 Study. They were asked about the presence of symptoms in the last month from a checklist of 33 symptoms. Measures of morbidity included symptom type (respiratory, musculoskeletal, gastrointestinal, mental health, neurological, systemic) and symptom summary measures looking at the number and im...
BACKGROUND: Common mental disorder (psychological distress) is associated with an increased risk ...
BACKGROUND Physical health has been demonstrated to mediate the mental health and mortality risk ass...
Nearing death, hospice patients are increasingly unable or unwilling to self-report their symptom in...
Background Associations between symptom experience and mortality have rarely been investigated. O...
BackgroundAssociations between symptom experience and mortality have rarely been investigated. One s...
Abstract Objective To quantify the link between lower, subclinically symptomatic, levels of psycholo...
OBJECTIVE: To examine associations between reported respiratory symptoms (as elicited by questionnai...
Objectives: Despite the widely-held view that psychological stress is a major cause of poor health, ...
Background Currently 22% of the UK population die in care homes, mostly within 18 months of admissio...
AbstractObjectiveTo distil the main findings from published papers on mortality in three cohorts inv...
Background: Socioeconomic differentials in mortality are increasing in many industrialised countries...
Background: Mental symptoms are prevalent among populations, but their associations with premature m...
Objective: To distil the main findings from published papers on mortality in three cohorts involvin...
BACKGROUND: Psychological distress and low socioeconomic status (SES) are recognized risk factors fo...
BackgroundMajor depressive disorder and subthreshold depression have been associated with premature ...
BACKGROUND: Common mental disorder (psychological distress) is associated with an increased risk ...
BACKGROUND Physical health has been demonstrated to mediate the mental health and mortality risk ass...
Nearing death, hospice patients are increasingly unable or unwilling to self-report their symptom in...
Background Associations between symptom experience and mortality have rarely been investigated. O...
BackgroundAssociations between symptom experience and mortality have rarely been investigated. One s...
Abstract Objective To quantify the link between lower, subclinically symptomatic, levels of psycholo...
OBJECTIVE: To examine associations between reported respiratory symptoms (as elicited by questionnai...
Objectives: Despite the widely-held view that psychological stress is a major cause of poor health, ...
Background Currently 22% of the UK population die in care homes, mostly within 18 months of admissio...
AbstractObjectiveTo distil the main findings from published papers on mortality in three cohorts inv...
Background: Socioeconomic differentials in mortality are increasing in many industrialised countries...
Background: Mental symptoms are prevalent among populations, but their associations with premature m...
Objective: To distil the main findings from published papers on mortality in three cohorts involvin...
BACKGROUND: Psychological distress and low socioeconomic status (SES) are recognized risk factors fo...
BackgroundMajor depressive disorder and subthreshold depression have been associated with premature ...
BACKGROUND: Common mental disorder (psychological distress) is associated with an increased risk ...
BACKGROUND Physical health has been demonstrated to mediate the mental health and mortality risk ass...
Nearing death, hospice patients are increasingly unable or unwilling to self-report their symptom in...