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- Ceausu, Iuliana2
- Lambrinoudaki, Irene2
- Rees, Margaret2
- Stute, Petra2
- Bitzer, Johannes1
- Cano, Antonio1
- Chedraui, Peter1
- Depypere, Herman1
- Durmusoglu, Fatih1
- Erkkola, Risto1
- Goulis, Dimitrios G1
- Karageorgiou, Vasilios1
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- Lindén Hirschberg, Angelica1
- Lopes, Patrice1
- Mueck, Alfred1
- Pines, Amos1
- Pérez-López, Faustino R1
- Senturk, Levent M1
- Simoncini, Tommaso1
- Spyropoulou, Areti1
- Stevenson, John C1
- van der Schouw, Yvonne T1
- van Trotsenburg, Mick1
- Zervas, Iannis1
EMAS Position Statements and Clincial Guides
2 Results
- Research Article
Management of depressive symptoms in peri- and postmenopausal women: EMAS position statement
MaturitasVol. 131p91–101Published online: November 5, 2019- Petra Stute
- Areti Spyropoulou
- Vasilios Karageorgiou
- Antonio Cano
- Johannes Bitzer
- Iuliana Ceausu
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 21The European Menopause and Andropause Society (EMAS) aims to provide holistic consensus advice on the clinical management of menopausal women through its position statements and clinical guides [1]. EMAS’s healthcare model for healthy menopause covers physical, psychological and social functioning, and incorporates disability and disease [2]. This position statement sets out a model of care for the management of depressive symptoms and depressive episodes in peri- and postmenopausal women, integrating services provided by healthcare and allied professionals. - Research Article
A model of care for healthy menopause and ageing: EMAS position statement
MaturitasVol. 92p1–6Published online: July 8, 2016- Petra Stute
- Iuliana Ceausu
- Herman Depypere
- Irene Lambrinoudaki
- Alfred Mueck
- Faustino R. Pérez-López
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 20The menopause can now be considered to be a mid-life event as the lifespan of women continues to increase in developed countries [1]. By the year 2025, the number of postmenopausal women is expected to rise to 1.1 billion worldwide. Although not all women will experience short- or long-term problems of menopause, the high prevalence of hot flushes [2,3] and vaginal atrophy [2,4], which can last for many years, as well as osteoporosis (1 in 3 women are at risk of an osteoporotic fracture) [5], makes caring for ageing women a key issue for health professionals.