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[Pyogenic infections in general practice].

G Kamenski1

  • 1Arbeitsgemeinschaft zur Erforschung der Allgemeinmedizin, Wien. kamenski@nextra.at

Wiener Medizinische Wochenschrift (1946)
|August 23, 2001
PubMed
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Superficial pyogenic infections significantly decreased in Middle-European general practices from 1944 to 1996. This decline was not observed in tonsillitis, otitis media, or appendicitis cases.

Area of Science:

  • General Practice
  • Infectious Disease Epidemiology
  • Public Health

Context:

  • Observational study analyzing epidemiological data from Middle-European general practices between 1944 and 1996.
  • Focuses on trends in superficial pyogenic infections over a 52-year period.
  • Compares infection rates with non-decreasing conditions like tonsillitis, otitis media, and appendicitis.

Purpose:

  • To investigate and report a previously undocumented significant decline in superficial pyogenic infections.
  • To identify specific infection types that did not follow this decreasing trend.
  • To highlight the lack of existing literature on this epidemiological shift.

Summary:

  • Statistical analysis revealed a remarkable decrease in superficial pyogenic infections across comparable Middle-European general practices.

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  • Conditions such as tonsillitis, otitis media, and appendicitis did not exhibit a similar decline during the study period.
  • No relevant prior studies were identified in the literature concerning this specific trend.
  • Impact:

    • Highlights a significant, previously unrecognized epidemiological trend in common infections.
    • Suggests potential environmental, societal, or medical practice changes influencing infection rates.
    • Underscores the need for further research into the causes of declining superficial pyogenic infections and the factors maintaining other infection rates.