6 research outputs found

    Transient response analysis of branched pipe systems toward a reliable skeletonization

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    202303 bcfcAccepted ManuscriptRGCOthersHK University of Science and TechnologyPublishe

    Suicide risk and suicide risk factors among immigrants in Italy: A bi-center matched sample study

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    Italy has the third-largest immigrant population of European Union countries, but only a few research papers have examined suicide risk in immigrant psychiatric patients in Italy. The main aim of this paper was to compare suicidal ideation and suicide attempts in a sample of 304 psychiatric patients. We included 152 immigrant patients matched with 152 Italian patients admitted to the same wards during the same time period by age, gender, and diagnosis. We also investigated sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of the two samples including psychiatric diagnosis, age of illness onset, duration of illness, previous hospitalizations, length of hospitalization, previous suicide attempts, and substance and alcohol abuse. There were no differences between immigrant and Italian patients in either suicidal ideation (previous or current) or suicide attempts (previous or current). Immigrant patients were more likely to have a shorter duration of illness than the Italian patients and Italian patients were more likely to report substance abuse than were immigrant patients. Despite similar suicide rates between immigrants and Italian psychiatric inpatients, appropriate assessment of suicide risk in these patients is essential in implementing therapeutic suicide prevention strategies

    Evaluation of the capacity to consent to treatment among patients with bipolar disorder: Comparison between the acute psychopathological episode and the stable mood phase

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    Objective: Treatment decision-making capacity (TDMC) is basic to therapeutic processes and can be measured with the MacArthur Competence Assessment Tool for Treatment (MacCAT-T). TDMC may fluctuate in bipolar disorder (BD). We used the MacCAT-T to compare BD inpatients with an acute manic or depressive episode with euthymic BD outpatients on their TDMC. Methods: We used the MacCAT-T to cross-sectionally assessed from May 2018 through October 2019 the TDCM of adult BD patients with a Mini Mental State Examination score ≄18, a group of acutely ill hospitalized patients for a manic/hypomanic episode and another of euthymic outpatients during their regular visits at our outpatient clinic. Patients were assessed with other specific psychiatric rating scales. We also tested their TDCM to an alternative treatment. Results: The inpatient group consisted of 53 patients and the outpatient of 47. Inpatients scored worse than outpatients on the MacCAT-T understanding, reasoning and expressing a choice subscale, but not on the appreciating scale. Outpatients were more capable in understanding the characteristics of an alternative advance treatment. MacCAT-T subscales correlated directly with mental state scores, and inversely with mania and psychopathology scores, while only the appreciating subscale correlated inversely with depression scores. Limitations: The limitations include small sample size and cross-sectional design. Conclusions: TDCM is higher in BD patients at their euthymic state, hence this is the right time to obtain consent from a BD patient in view of possibly depositing psychiatric advance directives
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