Original paperSomatic complaints in the German population
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2018, Safety ScienceCitation Excerpt :Measure of physical health. In order to examine criterion validity of the SGA, the Freiburg Complaint List (Freiburger Beschwerdeliste, FBL-R Fahrenberg, 1995) was applied. This established standardized questionnaire measures current (i.e., situationally caused) as well as chronic health impairments.
How to assess common somatic symptoms in large-scale studies: A systematic review of questionnaires
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2012, Biological PsychologyCitation Excerpt :Subjects were asked to mail all materials to our laboratory upon completion. In order to evaluate physiological well-being and health status, participants filled out the revised version of the Freiburg Complaint List (Freiburger Beschwerdenliste, FBL-R, Fahrenberg, 1994, 1995). The self-report questionnaire FBL-R was developed to measure frequency and intensity of 80 complaints in nine different physical domains: (1) general condition (e.g. sorrows concerning one's own health, feeling of distress, pain-sensitivity), (2) tiredness (e.g. difficulties in falling asleep or sleeping through), (3) cardiovascular complaints (e.g. heart palpitation or dyspnea while climbing stairs), (4) gastrointestinal complaints (e.g. sickness, cardialgia, obstipation), (5) head–throat (e.g. sneezing, itching and sore throat in the absence of a cold), (6) tenseness (e.g. clammy hands, sudden sweating, involuntary tremor of eyes or mouth), (7) emotional reactivity (e.g. facial flash, crying or stutter in particular situations), (8) pain (e.g. pain in back, shoulders or extremities, cramps in the body while working) and (9) sensory complaints (e.g. strong light-, noise- or color-sensitivity).
Differences in health complaints among university students from three European countries
2003, Preventive MedicineIdentifying somatization disorder in a population-based health examination survey: Psychosocial burden and gender differences
2001, PsychosomaticsCitation Excerpt :Symptoms in these subjects, therefore, may have finally led to a conviction of the presence of a disease process.33–36 A large empirical body of evidence consistently reveals a female excess in symptom reporting.18–23 Women report more ill health because the sick role may be more socially acceptable to them,37 and in consequence, they may be more ready to define bodily changes in terms of ill health.38
Psychoneuroimmunological correlates of persisting sciatic pain in patients who underwent discectomy
1997, Neuroscience Letters