43 research outputs found

    Cardiology in a Digital Age: Opportunities and Challenges for e-Health: A Literature Review

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    To date, mortality rates associated with heart diseases are dangerously increasing, making them the leading cause of death globally. From this point of view, digital technologies can provide health systems with the necessary support to increase prevention and monitoring, and improve care delivery. The present study proposes a review of the literature to understand the state of the art and the outcomes of international experiences. A reference framework is defined to develop reflections to optimize the use of resources and technologies, favoring the development of new organizational models and intervention strategies. Findings highlight the potential significance of e-health and telemedicine in supporting novel solutions and organizational models for cardiac illnesses as a response to the requirements and restrictions of patients and health systems. While privacy concerns and technology-acceptance-related issues arise, new avenues for research and clinical practice emerge, with the need to study ad hoc managerial models according to the type of patient and disease

    Understanding Factors Associated With Psychomotor Subtypes of Delirium in Older Inpatients With Dementia

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    Telecardiologia: potenzialità e limiti. Una revisione strutturata della letteratura

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    To date, mortality rates associated with heart disease are dangerously increasing, making it the leading cause of death globally. From this point of view, digital technologies can provide health systems with the necessary support to increase prevention, monitoring and improve care delivery. Several studies and experiments have been launched in recent years to investigate the potential and possible barriers to implementing these tools within Cardiology departments. These issues are, in fact, much debated today because, although these technologies bring numerous benefits, such as a reduction in hospitalization and readmission rates with a consequent improvement in the quality of life for patients, on the other hand, they are still a source of concern, given the lack of a regulation that guarantees common and transparent ethical and privacy standards. Furthermore, there are several obstacles to the use of given solutions, such as the low digital literacy of patients and social-health personnel, as well as the poor acceptance of the new model of care. The present study, therefore, proposes a structured review of the literature that collects the results of given experiences, through which it is possible to build a reference framework to develop reflections to optimize the use of resources and technologies, favoring the development of new organizational models and intervention strategies

    Sleep disorders in children with brain tumors: a pilot study based on a sleep disorder questionnaire

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    Purpose: The aim of this study is to compare the prevalence of sleep disorders (SD) between children treated for brain tumors and healthy children, and to define the type of SD. Methods: A case-control study was performed from October 2014 to April 2015. Inclusion criteria were patients between 2 and 16 years with \u201ccases\u201d defined as children affected by central nervous system tumors at least 3 months after the end of treatment (surgery and/or radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy) at the time of evaluation and \u201ccontrols\u201d as healthy children. Children\u2019s sleep quality was assessed with a questionnaire administered to parents (Child\u2019s Sleep Habits Questionnaire, CSHQ). A total score greater than 41 is suggestive for the presence of disturbed sleep. The risk of SD was estimated by the odds ratio (OR) and their 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) through logistic regression models. Results: Twenty-nine cases and 87 controls (in a 1:3 model) were enrolled, for a total of 116 subjects. The prevalence of SD resulted of 82.8% among cases and 64.4% in controls. A statistically significant difference between the two groups (OR 2.65; 95% CI 0.92\u20137.65) was not reached. Analyzing singular disturbances, parasomnias and night awakenings showed a statistically significant difference between the two groups (OR 4.32; 95% CI 1.08\u201317.34). Conclusions: Our study revealed a trend toward SD in children with brain tumor when compared to healthy population. Hovewer, analyzing specific subtypes of SD some significant differences were obtained. A significant difference was obtained only for specific subtypes of SD. Further investigations could better define the real burden of SD

    Economic and Performance Evaluation of E-Health before and after the Pandemic Era: A Literature Review and Future Perspectives

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    E-Health represents one of the pillars of the modern healthcare system and a strategy involving the use of digital and telemedicine tools to provide assistance to an increasing number of patients, reducing, at the same time, healthcare costs. Measuring and understanding the economic value and performance of e-Health tools is, therefore, essential to understanding the outcome and best uses of such technologies. The aim of this paper is to determine the most frequently used methods for measuring the economic value and the performance of services in the framework of e-Health, considering different pathologies. An in-depth analysis of 20 recent articles, rigorously selected from more than 5000 contributions, underlines a great interest from the clinical community in economic and performance-related topics. Several diseases are the object of detailed clinical trials and protocols, leading to various economic outcomes, especially in the COVID-19 post-pandemic era. Many e-Health tools are mentioned in the studies, especially those that appear more frequently in people’s lives outside of the clinical setting, such as apps and web portals, which allow for clinicians to keep in contact with their patients. While such e-Health tools and programs are increasingly studied from practical perspectives, such as in the case of Virtual Hospital frameworks, there is a lack of consensus regarding the recommended models to map and report their economic outcomes and performance. More investigations and guidelines by scientific societies are advised to understand the potential and path of such an evolving and promising phenomenon

    Survival after the diagnosis of breast or colorectal cancer in the GAZA Strip from 2005 to 2014

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    Background: Within a dramatic socio-political context, cancer represents a growing health burden in the Gaza Strip. We investigated the survival experience of people diagnosed with breast (BC) or colorectal (CRC) cancer from 2005 to 2014. Methods: Data included 1360 BC cases (median age 55.1 years) and 722 CRC cases (median age: 59.5 years; 52.5% men) recorded by the Gaza Cancer Registry according to a standard protocol. Clinical information was available for cases diagnosed in 2005-2006 only. Survival probabilities were estimated by Kaplan-Meyer method, while hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CI), adjusted for age and sex, were computed to assess factors associated with the risk of death. Results: Five-year survival was 65.1% for women with BC and 50.2% for patients with CRC. Advanced age (> 65 years), stage, and grade increased the death risk. Full access to therapies was associated with a reduced risk of death as compared with patients who had limited access (HR = 0.26, 95% CI:0.13-0.51 for BC; and HR = 0.11, 95% CI:0.04-0.31 for CRC). Conclusion(s): The 5-year survival after BC or CRC in the Gaza Strip was in line with estimates from surrounding Arab countries, but it was much lower than in developed Mediterranean countries (e.g., in Italy or in Jewish people in Israel)

    Valutazione analitica e applicazione clinica di un metodo Real Time PCR per il dosaggio della carica virale di Epstein-Barr virus

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    We assessed the performance of a Real Time PCR assay to be used for EBV viremia evaluation in clinical specimens. Sensitivity and intra-/interassay reproducibility were evaluated by using DNA serial dilutions from the Namalwa cell line. EBV DNA was analyzed in serum samples from 39 patients (pts) with undifferentiated type nasopharyngeal carcinoma (UCNT), from 5 infectious mononucleosis (IM) pts and from 18 healthy donors. Results obtained by Real Time PCR were compared with those obtained by quantitative competitive (QC)-PCR assay.We thereafter measured the dynamics of EBV DNA load in 5 HIV-seropositive (HIV+) and 9 HIV-seronegative (HIV-, as controls) pts with lymphoma, treated with high-dose chemotherapy (HCT) followed by autologus stem-cell transplantation (ASCT). We found a sensitivity of 100% at 10 EBV copies. The Spearman correlation for both the intra- and the interassay reproducibility was statistically significant (r=0.99; p20 copies/reaction and >30% for EBV viral loads <20 copies/reaction. No EBV DNA was detected in healthy donors. Higher EBV DNA loads were found by Real Time PCR (range 1173-46328 copies/ml) than by QC-PCR (range 450-5000 copies/ml) (p<0.05). 54% of UCNT and 100% of IM pts were EBV DNA positive. Two HIV+(40%) and 2 HIV-(22%) pts with lymphoma had detectable EBV viremia during the follow-up. The Real Time PCR is a suitable technique for high-throughput screening and frequent monitoring of patients at risk for developing EBV-associated diseases

    Residence in Proximity of a Coal-Oil-Fired Thermal Power Plant and Risk of Lung and Bladder Cancer in North-Eastern Italy. A Population-Based Study: 1995–2009

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    This study investigated the risk of lung and bladder cancers in people residing in proximity of a coal-oil-fired thermal power plant in an area of north-eastern Italy, covered by a population-based cancer registry. Incidence rate ratios (IRR) by sex, age, and histology were computed according to tertiles of residential exposure to benzene, nitrogen dioxide (NO2), particular matter, and sulfur dioxide (SO2) among 1076 incident cases of lung and 650 cases of bladder cancers. In men of all ages and in women under 75 years of age, no significant associations were observed. Conversely, in women aged ≥75 years significantly increased risks of lung and bladder cancers were related to high exposure to benzene (IRR for highest vs. lowest tertile: 2.00 for lung cancer and 1.94 for bladder cancer) and NO2 (IRR: 1.72 for lung cancer; and 1.94 for bladder cancer). In these women, a 1.71-fold higher risk of lung cancer was also related to a high exposure to SO2. Acknowledging the limitations of our study, in particular that we did not have information regarding cigarette smoking habits, the findings of this study indicate that air pollution exposure may have had a role with regard to the risk of lung and bladder cancers limited to women aged ≥75 years. Such increased risk warrants further analytical investigations
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