Prevalence
Fatigue is one of the most common presenting symptoms to a general practitioner (main complaint of 5-10% of patients and a co-occurring symptom in a further 5-10%) (1). However, this is the tip of the iceberg:
- 16% of adults report lassitude in the last 2 weeks
- at any given time, 1 in every 5 people experience unusual tiredness and 1 in 10 suffer prolonged fatigue (2)
- it can be seen at any age but less frequently in the very young and old
- women experience tiredness twice as much as in men (1)
- there is an increased incidence of chronic disease in patients presenting with fatigue than among other patients (3).
Reference:
- Hamilton W, Watson J, Round A. Investigating fatigue in primary care. BMJ. 2010 Aug 24;341:c4259.
- Royal College of Psychiatrists 2008. Tiredness
- Nijrolder I et al. Diagnoses during follow-up of patients presenting with fatigue in primary care. CMAJ 2009;181(10)
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