Exact(3)
(B) Comparative medication patterns in bipolar II disorder.
(A) Comparative medication patterns in bipolar I disorder.
Findings are particularly congruent with those reported in a study of medication patterns in the Michigan Medicaid database [ 28], in which the proportion of schizophrenia patients treated with olanzapine monotherapy remained relatively steady over the first 3 months of treatment while the proportion of patients receiving risperidone monotherapy decreased over time.
Similar(57)
Beyond self-medicated use of antibiotics for menstrual symptoms, other studies have evaluated antibiotic self-medication patterns, in general, among other populations in Nigeria indicating that this overall practice is common.
Given documented differences in treatment patterns by bipolar subtype, we were interested to further explore whether differences in medication patterns appeared within bipolar I and bipolar II subgroups (Ghaemi et al. 2006).
Even when controlling for potential clinical and demographic differences between the two samples that could contribute substantively to observed differences in medication patterns, Argentinians compared to North Americans were more often taking mood stabilizers and benzodiazepines/hypnotics and less often taking antipsychotics.
Figure 3 Medication patterns by nationality and bipolar subtype.
ADHD medication use patterns in the US differed markedly from those in western European countries.
Knisely, MR, Carpenter, JS, Broome, ME, Holmes, AM, Von Ah, D, Skaar, T, and Draucker, CB. "Medication exposure patterns in primary care patients prescribed pharmacogenetically actionable opioids". Qualitative Report 23, no. 8 (August 7, 2018): 1861-1875.
Databases of this kind have demonstrated their usefulness for epidemiological analysis of medication consumption patterns in various clinical entities [ 36- 42] carried out from a population perspective.
The objective of this study was to evaluate the 'real-world' medication utilization patterns in patients with type 2 diabetes treated with exenatide BID (exenatide) versus insulin glargine (glargine).
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