Red Wine Treatment Report

Category: Nutrition/Diets

Most Popular Types: Red Wine Extract

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What is Red Wine?

An example of Red Wine

Research has suggested that red wine is beneficial to heart health. The cardioprotective effect has been attributed to antioxidants present in the skin and seeds of red grapes. Scientists believe the antioxidants, called flavonoids, reduce the risk of coronary heart disease.

Reported Purpose & Perceived Effectiveness

Reasons and Perceived effectiveness
Perceived Effectiveness
Purpose # of patients # of patients with evaluations
Major
Moderate
Slight
None
Can’t tell
General health 13 3 Efficacy_moderate Efficacy_cant_tell
Stress 4 0
Anxious mood 1 0
Promote relaxation 1 1 Efficacy_major
Social anxiety 1 0
Doctor recommendation 1 0

See all 25 patients currently using Red Wine

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Reported Side Effects

Side effects as an overall problem

Severe
0
Moderate
0
Mild
4
None
2

Commonly reported side effects, conditions, and hospitalizations associated with Red Wine

Excess mucus 1
Feeling of heart pounding 1
Heart palpitations 1
Dehydration 1
Intoxication 1
Non hormonal hot flushes 1
See all 7 reported side effects See top 6 reported side effects

Reported Schedules

Frequently reported dosages based on patients currently using Red Wine. See all 19 dosages

  1 L as needed 1 other every other week 1 other daily 2 other daily 5 tbs. daily 5 other daily 5 mg daily 12 hr daily 150 mg daily 250 mL daily
  2 Number of Patients: 2 2 Number of Patients: 2 2 Number of Patients: 2 3 Number of Patients: 3 1 Number of Patients: 1 1 Number of Patients: 1 1 Number of Patients: 1 1 Number of Patients: 1 1 Number of Patients: 1 1 Number of Patients: 1  

Reported Stop Reasons

Why Patients Stopped Using Red Wine (multiple reasons could be selected)
Reason # Patients Percentage of patients
Did not seem to work 1   Did not seem to work: 33%
Personal research 1   Personal research: 33%
Side effects too severe 1   Side effects too severe: 33%
Other 1   Other: 33%

See all 3 patients who’ve stopped using Red Wine

Currently Using Red Wine

A bar graph

0-1 month 1-3 months 3-6 months 6 months-1year 1-2 years 2 years or more
0
0
0
0

Stopped Using Red Wine

A bar graph

0-1 month 1-3 months 3-6 months 6 months-1year 1-2 years 2 years or more
0
0
0

Reported Adherence, Burden & Cost See details from patient evaluations

Adherence

Taking treatment as prescribed

Adherence of Red Wine

Always
0 0%
Usually
4 67%
Sometimes
1 17%
Never
1 17%

Burden

Difficulty being on treatment

Burden of Red Wine

Very
0 0%
Somewhat
0 0%
A little
2 33%
Not at all
4 67%

Cost

Paid out of pocket

Cost of Red Wine

$200+
0 0%
$100-199
0 0%
$50-99
0 0%
$25-49
4 67%
< $25
2 33%

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1 patient evaluation for Red Wine

  • QuietGuy
    Sex: M
    Data Quality: 1 star
    Dysthymia
    Depression: 0
    Mania: 0
    Emotional: 0
    Anxiety: 1
    Compulsion: 1
    External Stress: Severe
    Rx Therapy
    63 M
    Function: High
    Distress: Low
  • 3433-thumb
  • See QuietGuy's full Red Wine history
Purpose: General health (Started May 24, 2007)
Date Dosage Perceived effectiveness Side Effects Adherence Burden
Jul 12, 2011 250 mL Daily ?Can't tell MildMildMildMildMild UsuallyUsuallyUsuallyUsuallyUsually A littleA littleA littleA littleA little
Side effects:
Intoxication
Date
Jul 12, 2011
Advice & Tips
As a compulsive person who takes a prescribed drug that induces alcohol cravings (bupropion, as part of hypomania, dose-dependent) and another that inensifies the effects of alcohol (venlafaxine, dose-dependent), there is an argument for my not drinking at all. Most recently, exercising control via the shopping budget seems to work well.
Cost
< $25 monthly
  • Icon_thumb_off 0 helpful marks

5 additional evaluations for Red Wine are not currently shared publicly.

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