| Literature DB >> 1416778 |
T P Ng1, N C Tan, G K Wansaicheong.
Abstract
A community-based questionnaire survey to study the prevalence of dysmenorrhoea, its associated risk factors and impact on daily living was carried out on a random sample of 415 female persons aged 15 to 54 residing in Housing Development Board flats in Clementi Town. The overall prevalence of dysmenorrhoea, defined as one or more episodes of menstrual cramp or pain in the previous year, not due to a diagnosed gynaecological disease, was 51.3%. The condition was less prevalent and less severe in older women and in women with later menarche. It was also less prevalent in women who were parous, with the greatest number of parous women reporting improvement in severity after the first child. Among those with dysmenorrhoea, about 52% of students, 42% of working women, and 30% of housewives reported that their ability to perform work was affected. About 6% of all women consulted a doctor for their problem, and 10% of all employed women reported having been sick-absent because of dysmenorrhoea.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1992 PMID: 1416778
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Acad Med Singapore ISSN: 0304-4602 Impact factor: 2.473