37 research outputs found
The effectiveness of intervening on social isolation to reduce mortality during heat waves in aged population: a retrospective ecological study
Background: Heat waves are correlated with increased mortality in the aged population. Social isolation is known as a vulnerability factor. This study aims at evaluating the correlation between an intervention to reduce social isolation and the increase in mortality in the population over 80 during heat waves. Methods: This study adopted a retrospective ecologic design. We compared the excess mortality rate (EMR) in the over-80 population during heat waves in urban areas of Rome (Italy) where a program to reduce social isolation was implemented, to others where it was not implemented. We measured the mortality of the summer periods from 2015 to 2019 compared with 2014 (a year without heat waves). Winter mortality, cadastral income, and the proportion of people over 90 were included in the multivariate Poisson regression. Results: The EMR in the intervention and controls was 2.70% and 3.81%, respectively. The rate ratio was 0.70 (c.i. 0.54–0.92, p-value 0.01). The incidence rate ratio (IRR) of the interventions, with respect to the controls, was 0.76 (c.i. 0.59–0.98). After adjusting for other variables, the IRR was 0.44 (c.i. 0.32–0.60). Conclusions: Reducing social isolation could limit the impact of heat waves on the mortality of the elderly population
Assessing the impact of a community-based pro-active monitoring program addressing the need for care of community-dwelling citizens aged more than 80: protocol for a prospective pragmatic trial and results of the baseline Assessment
The aim of this paper is to describe the protocol of a study assessing the impact of a Community-based pro-Active Monitoring Program, by measuring the effect in counteracting the adverse outcomes related to frailty
Pro-active monitoring and social interventions at community level mitigate the impact of coronavirus (COVID-19) epidemic on older adults' mortality in Italy: A retrospective cohort analysis
Background The COVID-19 epidemic in Italy has severely affected people aged more than 80, especially socially isolated. Aim of this paper is to assess whether a social and health program reduced mortality associated to the epidemic. Methods An observational retrospective cohort analysis of deaths recorded among >80 years in three Italian cities has been carried out to compare death rate of the general population and "Long Live the Elderly!"(LLE) program. Parametric and non-parametric tests have been performed to assess differences of means between the two populations. A multivariable analysis to assess the impact of covariates on weekly mortality has been carried out by setting up a linear mixed model. Results The total number of services delivered to the LLE population (including phone calls and home visits) was 34,528, 1 every 20 day per person on average, one every 15 days during March and April. From January to April 2019, the same population received one service every 41 days on average, without differences between January-February and March-April. The January-April 2020 cumulative crude death rate was 34.8 (9,718 deaths out of 279,249 individuals; CI95%: 34.1-35.5) and 28.9 (166 deaths out of 5,727 individuals; CI95%:24.7-33.7) for the general population and the LLE sample respectively. The general population weekly death rate increased after the 11th calendar week that was not the case among the LLE program participants (p<0.001). The Standardized Mortality Ratio was 0.83; (CI95%: 0.71-0.97). Mortality adjusted for age, gender, COVID-19 weekly incidence and prevalence of people living in nursing homes was lower in the LLE program than in the general population (p<0.001). Conclusions LLE program is likely to limit mortality associated with COVID-19. Further studies are needed to establish whether it is due to the impact of social care that allows a better clients' adherence to the recommendations of physical distancing or to an improved surveillance of older adults that prevents negative outcomes associated with COVID-19
The european innovation partnership on active and healthy ageing synergies: protocol for a prospective observational study to measure the impact of a community-based program on prevention and mitigation of frailty (ICP –PMF) in community-dwelling older adults
Aim of this paper is to describe the protocol of the
study “Impact of a Community-based Program on
Prevention and Mitigation of Frailty in communitydwelling older adults” developed in the framework of
the European Innovation Partnership on Active and
Healthy Ageing. This proposal has been developed by
the Partnership Action groups on frailty, fall prevention
and polypharmacy in older. The proposal wants to
assess the impact of community-based programs aimed
to counteract three main outcomes related to frailty:
hospitalization, institutionalization and death. Bringing
together researchers from seven European countries,
the proposal aims to achieve the critical mass and the
geographical extension enough to provide information
useful to all older European citizens. An observational
study will be carried out to calculate the incidence of
the different outcomes in relation to the various
interventions that will be assessed; results will be
compared with data coming from already established
national, regional and local dataset using the
observed/expected approach. The sample will be made
up by at least 2000 citizens for each outcome. All the citizens will be assessed at the baseline with two
multidimensional questionnaires: the RISC
questionnaire and the Short Functional Geriatric
Evaluation questionnaire. The outcomes will be
assessed every six-twelve months
BUILDING BRIDGES FOR INNOVATION IN AGEING : SYNERGIES BETWEEN ACTION GROUPS OF THE EIP ON AHA
The Strategic Implementation Plan of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing (EIP on AHA) proposed six Action Groups. After almost three years of activity, many achievements have been obtained through commitments or collaborative work of the Action Groups. However, they have often worked in silos and, consequently, synergies between Action Groups have been proposed to strengthen the triple win of the EIP on AHA. The paper presents the methodology and current status of the Task Force on EIP on AHA synergies. Synergies are in line with the Action Groups' new Renovated Action Plan (2016-2018) to ensure that their future objectives are coherent and fully connected. The outcomes and impact of synergies are using the Monitoring and Assessment Framework for the EIP on AHA (MAFEIP). Eight proposals for synergies have been approved by the Task Force: Five cross-cutting synergies which can be used for all current and future synergies as they consider overarching domains (appropriate polypharmacy, citizen empowerment, teaching and coaching on AHA, deployment of synergies to EU regions, Responsible Research and Innovation), and three cross-cutting synergies focussing on current Action Group activities (falls, frailty, integrated care and chronic respiratory diseases).Peer reviewe
QoS Support for Interactive Communication with DVB/RCS Satellites
AbstractFull integration of satellite technology in future
terrestrial infrastructures requires support for high-quality
broadband bi-directional communications. Research efforts in the
field of satellite communications are currently oriented in the study
of QoS-aware solutions for DVB-S and DVB-RCS which allowed
seamless deployment in the Internet. In this paper the QoS
architecture designed in the framework of the SATlP6 project,
sponsored within the 51h EU Research Programme Framework, is
presented. This is organized into two main modules, the Traffic
Control and Bandwidth on Demand (BOD) module, whose aim are
to provide for differentiated service of conveyed IP flows and
efficient utilization of uplink bandwidth respectively. Experimental
results obtained through Opnet simulations are reported and
discussed to assess the effectiveness of the designed solution in terms
of both service differentiation and efficient utilization of satellite
resources