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Fig. 1 | BMC Family Practice

Fig. 1

From: Type of treatment, symptoms and patient satisfaction play an important role in primary care contact during prostate cancer follow-up: results from the population-based PROFILES registry

Fig. 1

Differences between survivors who had contact and survivors who had no contact with their general practitioner during follow-up. Note: Subgroup analyses (t-tests) were used to test the differences between prostate cancer survivors who had contact with their GP during follow-up and prostate cancer survivors who did not had contact with their GP during follow-up on (A) urinary symptoms, incontinence aid, bowel symptoms, hormonal symptoms, sexual activity and sexual functioning, and (B) patients’ satisfaction with their GP, patients’ trust in their GP, and the appraised knowledge of GPs according to patients. Missing data: urinary symptoms = 28; (conditional item) incontinence aid = 328; bowel symptoms = 33; hormonal symptoms = 28; sexual activity = 45; (conditional item) sexual functioning = 243; satisfaction with GP = 12; trust in GP = 31; appraised knowledge of GP = 87. Abbreviations: GP = General Practitioner

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