9 research outputs found

    Real-world data: come possono aiutare a migliorare la qualità dell’assistenza

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    The current COVID pandemic crisis made it even clearer that the solutions to several questions that public health must face require the access to good quality data. Several issues of the value and potential of health data and the current critical issues that hinder access are discussed in this paper. In particular, the paper (i) focuses on “real-world data” definition; (ii) proposes a review of the real-world data availability in our country; (iii) discusses its potential, with particular focus on the possibility of improving knowledge on the quality of care provided by the health system; (iv) emphasizes that the availability of data alone is not sufficient to increase our knowledge, underlining the need that innovative analysis methods (e.g., artificial intelligence techniques) must be framed in the paradigm of clinical research; and (v) addresses some ethical issues related to their use. The proposal is to realize an alliance between organizations interested in promoting research aimed at collecting scientifically solid evidence to support the clinical governance of public healt

    The behavior of inflation and interest rates: evidence from Italian national history

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    KOBI 3.0 A KNOWLEDGE ECOSYSTEM FOR CREATIVITY RESEARCH AND DESIGN

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    KOBI 3.0 is a system for learning and creativity, designed with students, artists, and designers in mind. By integrating artificial intelligence with augmented reality technologies, KOBI 3.0 offers an immersive and dynamic user experience. Thanks to multilingual support, it ensures exploration, ideation, and content creation for a global community of users

    The effects of unification: markets, policy, and cyclical convergence in Italy, 1861–1913

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    This paper uses time-series evidence on construction movements to examine the convergence of regional business cycles in the decades that followed Italy’s unification. The aggregate series point to cyclical convergence, but a sector-level analysis traces this result to the decline in differentiated “regional-policy” shocks. The regional market cycles diverged, as regions specialized in different sectors of production; market-cycle convergence is observed only within the “industrial triangle,” the regions of which also developed different specializations. This suggests that the balance between growing interdependence and growing differentiation is not general, as the current literature presumes, but specialization-specific.Unification, Regions, Specialization, Business cycles

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