92 results
Search Results
2. A Low-Cost Early Warning Method for Infectious Diseases with Asymptomatic Carriers.
- Author
-
Gaspari, Mauro
- Subjects
COMMUNICABLE diseases ,COVID-19 ,INFECTION control ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
At the beginning of 2023, the Italian former prime minister, the former health minister and 17 others including the current president of the Lombardy region were placed under investigation on suspicion of aggravated culpable epidemic in connection with the government's response at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. The charges revolve around the failure by authorities to take adequate measures to prevent the spread of the virus in the Bergamo area, which experienced a significant excess of deaths during the initial outbreak. The aim of this paper is to analyse the pandemic data of Italy and the Lombardy region in the first 10 days of the pandemic, spanning from the 24th of February 2020 to the 4th of March 2020. The objective is to determine whether the use of early warning indicators could have facilitated the identification of a critical increase in infections. This identification, in turn, would have enabled the timely formulation of strategies for pandemic containment, thereby reducing the number of deaths. In conclusion, to translate our findings into practical guidelines, we propose a low-cost early warning method for infectious respiratory diseases with asymptomatic carriers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Data-Driven Deep Learning Neural Networks for Predicting the Number of Individuals Infected by COVID-19 Omicron Variant.
- Author
-
Oluwasakin, Ebenezer O. and Khaliq, Abdul Q. M.
- Subjects
SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant ,COVID-19 ,MEDICAL personnel ,EPIDEMIOLOGICAL models ,COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
Infectious disease epidemics are challenging for medical and public health practitioners. They require prompt treatment, but it is challenging to recognize and define epidemics in real time. Knowing the prediction of an infectious disease epidemic can evaluate and prevent the disease's impact. Mathematical models of epidemics that work in real time are important tools for preventing disease, and data-driven deep learning enables practical algorithms for identifying parameters in mathematical models. In this paper, the SIR model was reduced to a logistic differential equation involving a constant parameter and a time-dependent function. The time-dependent function leads to constant, rational, and birational models. These models use several constant parameters from the available data to predict the time and number of people reported to be infected with the COVID-19 Omicron variant. Two out of these three models, rational and birational, provide accurate predictions for countries that practice strict mitigation measures, but fail to provide accurate predictions for countries that practice partial mitigation measures. Therefore, we introduce a time-series model based on neural networks to predict the time and number of people reported to be infected with the COVID-19 Omicron variant in a given country that practices both partial and strict mitigation measures. A logistics-informed neural network algorithm was also introduced. This algorithm takes as input the daily and cumulative number of people who are reported to be infected with the COVID-19 Omicron variant in the given country. The algorithm helps determine the analytical solution involving several constant parameters for each model from the available data. The accuracy of these models is demonstrated using error metrics on Omicron variant data for Portugal, Italy, and China. Our findings demonstrate that the constant model could not accurately predict the daily or cumulative infections of the COVID-19 Omicron variant in the observed country because of the long series of existing data of the epidemics. However, the rational and birational models accurately predicted cumulative infections in countries adopting strict mitigation measures, but they fell short in predicting the daily infections. Furthermore, both models performed poorly in countries with partial mitigation measures. Notably, the time-series model stood out for its versatility, effectively predicting both daily and cumulative infections in countries irrespective of the stringency of their mitigation measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A COVID-19 Infection Model Considering the Factors of Environmental Vectors and Re-Positives and Its Application to Data Fitting in Japan and Italy.
- Author
-
Dong S, Lv J, Ma W, and Pradeep BGSA
- Subjects
- Humans, Japan epidemiology, Italy epidemiology, Basic Reproduction Number, COVID-19 epidemiology, Communicable Diseases
- Abstract
COVID-19, which broke out globally in 2019, is an infectious disease caused by a novel strain of coronavirus, and its spread is highly contagious and concealed. Environmental vectors play an important role in viral infection and transmission, which brings new difficulties and challenges to disease prevention and control. In this paper, a type of differential equation model is constructed according to the spreading functions and characteristics of exposed individuals and environmental vectors during the virus infection process. In the proposed model, five compartments were considered, namely, susceptible individuals, exposed individuals, infected individuals, recovered individuals, and environmental vectors (contaminated with free virus particles). In particular, the re-positive factor was taken into account (i.e., recovered individuals who have lost sufficient immune protection may still return to the exposed class). With the basic reproduction number R0 of the model, the global stability of the disease-free equilibrium and uniform persistence of the model were completely analyzed. Furthermore, sufficient conditions for the global stability of the endemic equilibrium of the model were also given. Finally, the effective predictability of the model was tested by fitting COVID-19 data from Japan and Italy.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Covid-19 on stock market performance: evidence from Italy.
- Author
-
Mauro, Marianna, Giancotti, Monica, Pipitone, Vito, and Tiscini, Riccardo
- Subjects
RATE of return on stocks ,FINANCIAL market reaction ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MARKET capitalization ,VALUATION of corporations ,BULL markets - Abstract
This paper has explored the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on the Italian stock market at an industry level, analysing companies listed in the two major stock indexes: MIB 30 and STAR. Using daily firm-level stock prices (from December 2019, until October 31, 2020), we employed an event-study approach to analyse short-term stock market reactions, considering different pandemic windows period. Results showed that stocks reacted negatively to the announcement of the first case in the country, with deep reversal effects when the country was locked down. Monetary policy measures showed potential to ease stock markets: the announcement of Next Generation Agreement highlights the reversed role of Market Capitalization. Firm-specific variables were included in order to make inferences about firm characteristics that emerged as value drivers during the pandemic: in the first lockdown period, a greater company's capitalization ensured a greater resilience to the Covid-19 shock. Reversals at both an industry and a company level are observed. Results allow to understand how an outbreak of contagious disease affects stock returns in various sectors, helping investors to develop trading strategies to protect their wealth from future epidemics and providing inputs into the assessment of economic vulnerability to pandemic crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A stochastic particle extended SEIRS model with repeated vaccination: Application to real data of COVID-19 in Italy.
- Author
-
Papageorgiou, Vasileios E. and Tsaklidis, George
- Subjects
- *
VACCINATION , *COMMUNICABLE diseases , *COVID-19 pandemic , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL models , *PARAMETER estimation , *H7N9 Influenza - Abstract
The prediction of the evolution of epidemics plays an important role in limiting the transmissibility and the burdensome consequences of infectious diseases, which leads to the employment of mathematical modeling. In this paper, we propose a stochastic particle filtering extended SEIRS model with repeated vaccination and time-dependent parameters, aiming to efficiently describe the demanding dynamics of time-varying epidemics. The validity of our model is examined using daily records of COVID-19 in Italy for a period of 525 days, revealing a notable capacity to uncover the hidden dynamics of the pandemic. The main findings include the estimation of asymptomatic cases, which is a well-known feature of the current pandemic. Unlike other proposed models that employ extra compartments for asymptomatic cases, which force the estimation of this proportion and significantly increase the model's complexity, our approach leads to the evaluation of the hidden dynamics of COVID-19 without additional computational burden. Other findings that confirm the model's appropriateness and robustness are its parameter evolution and the estimation of more ICU-admitted cases compared to the official records during the most prevalent infection wave of January 2022, attributed to the intensified increase in admissions that may have led to full occupancy in ICUs. As the vast majority of datasets contain time series of total recovered and vaccinated cases, we propose a statistical algorithm to estimate the currently recovered and protected through vaccination cases. This necessity arises from the attenuation of antibodies after vaccination/infection and is necessary for long-time interval predictions. Finally, we not only present a novel stochastic epidemiological model and test its efficiency but also investigate its mathematical properties, such as the existence and stability of epidemic equilibria, giving new insights to the literature. The latter provides additional details concerning the system's long-term behavior, while the conclusions drawn from the R0 index provide perspectives on the severity and future of the COVID-19 pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic: the ethics of coercive vaccination policies - where should we draw the line?
- Author
-
Yan Ting Alarica Tay
- Subjects
VACCINATION policies ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,SARS-CoV-2 ,HEALTH services accessibility - Abstract
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has created unprecedented social, financial, and moral disruptions across the globe despite global efforts to reduce the transmission of the novel coronavirus. Currently, vaccinating populations against COVID-19 has emerged as the most sustainable strategy to help countries recover from the socioeconomic effects of COVID-19 while protecting public health. To meet vaccination targets, some countries have adopted policies that rely on varying levels of coercion. This paper analyses the ethical implications of coercive vaccination policies implemented in Singapore and Italy, which impose barriers to accessing healthcare on the unvaccinated. These two cases are compared to the vaccine mandate in New Zealand, which did not restrict access to healthcare for the unvaccinated. This analysis draws on key considerations from Kass' ethical framework for assessing public health intervention. This analysis is relevant to countries considering similar policies to increase vaccination uptake for infectious diseases. Since healthcare is a fundamental good, a critical question is whether imposing barriers to accessing healthcare services is an ethically justifiable consequence of the choice to remain unvaccinated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Impact Of Covid-19 On Educational Sector.
- Author
-
Kaur, Manreet
- Subjects
COMMUNICABLE diseases ,COVID-19 ,SOCIAL distancing ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,CORONAVIRUSES - Abstract
COVID-19 is the highly communicable disease which is being announced as pandemic by WHO. The disease has already impacted the economies of big nations like China, Italy, United states etc and now this disease is hitting our developing country i.e. India too. COVID-19 or Corona virus is human to human spread disease and thus social distancing is the only measure which everyone can take to minimize its spread. National lockdown is the measure taken by Government to create distance among people. But what will be the probable impact of this lockdown on different sectors of our country. This paper aims to analyze impact of COVID-19 on the educational sector of India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Modelling the propagation of infectious disease via transportation networks.
- Author
-
Anupriya, Bansal, Prateek, and Graham, Daniel J.
- Subjects
COMMUNICABLE diseases ,COVID-19 pandemic ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,SPATIAL variation ,PLANT propagation - Abstract
The dynamics of human mobility have been known to play a critical role in the spread of infectious diseases like COVID-19. In this paper, we present a simple compact way to model the transmission of infectious disease through transportation networks using widely available aggregate mobility data in the form of a zone-level origin-destination (OD) travel flow matrix. A key feature of our model is that it not only captures the propagation of infection via direct connections between zones (first-order effects) as in most existing studies but also transmission effects that are due to subsequent interactions in the remainder of the system (higher-order effects). We demonstrate the importance of capturing higher-order effects in a simulation study. We then apply our model to study the first wave of COVID-19 infections in (i) Italy, and, (ii) the New York Tri-State area. We use daily data on mobility between Italian provinces (province-level OD data) and between Tri-State Area counties (county-level OD data), and daily reported caseloads at the same geographical levels. Our empirical results indicate substantial predictive power, particularly during the early stages of the outbreak. Our model forecasts at least 85% of the spatial variation in observed weekly COVID-19 cases. Most importantly, our model delivers crucial metrics to identify target areas for intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Forecasting the spread of SARS-CoV-2 in the campania region using genetic programming.
- Author
-
D'Angelo, Gianni and Rampone, Salvatore
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,GENETIC programming ,SARS-CoV-2 ,FORECASTING ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,TRAVEL restrictions - Abstract
Coronavirus disease 19 (COVID-19) is an infectious disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which is responsible for the ongoing global pandemic. Stringent measures have been adopted to face the pandemic, such as complete lockdown, shutting down businesses and trade, as well as travel restrictions. Nevertheless, such solutions have had a tremendous economic impact. Although the use of recent vaccines seems to reduce the scale of the problem, the pandemic does not appear to finish soon. Therefore, having a forecasting model about the COVID-19 spread is of paramount importance to plan interventions and, then, to limit the economic and social damage. In this paper, we use Genetic Programming to evidence dependences of the SARS-CoV-2 spread from past data in a given Country. Namely, we analyze real data of the Campania Region, in Italy. The resulting models prove their effectiveness in forecasting the number of new positives 10/15 days before, with quite a high accuracy. The developed models have been integrated into the context of SVIMAC-19, an analytical-forecasting system for the containment, contrast, and monitoring of Covid-19 within the Campania Region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The impact of control and mitigation strategies during the second wave of coronavirus infections in Spain and Italy.
- Author
-
De Nadai, Marco, Roomp, Kristof, Lepri, Bruno, and Oliver, Nuria
- Subjects
CORONAVIRUS diseases ,COVID-19 ,CONTACT tracing ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,COVID-19 pandemic ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,COVID-19 testing - Abstract
European countries struggled to fight against the second and the third waves of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the Test-Trace-Isolate (TTI) strategy widely adopted over the summer and early fall 2020 failed to contain the spread of the disease effectively. This paper sheds light on the effectiveness of such a strategy in two European countries (Spain and Italy) by analysing data from June to December 2020, collected via a large-scale online citizen survey with 95,251 and 43,393 answers in Spain and Italy, respectively. Our analysis describes several weaknesses in each of the three pillars of the TTI strategy: Test, Trace, and Isolate. We find that 40% of respondents had to wait more than 48 hours to obtain coronavirus tests results, while literature has shown that a delay of more than one day might make tracing all cases inefficient. We also identify limitations in the manual contact tracing capabilities in both countries, as only 29% of respondents in close contact with a confirmed infected individual reported having been contact traced. Moreover, our analysis shows that more than 45% of respondents report being unable to self-isolate if needed. We also analyse the mitigation strategies deployed to contain the second wave of coronavirus. We find that these interventions were particularly effective in Italy, where close contacts were reduced by more than 20% in the general population. Finally, we analyse the participants' perceptions about the coronavirus risk associated with different daily activities. We observe that they are often gender- and age-dependent, and not aligned with the actual risk identified by the literature. This finding emphasises the importance of deploying public-health communication campaigns to debunk misconceptions about SARS-CoV-2. Overall, our work illustrates the value of online citizen surveys to quickly and efficiently collect large-scale population data to support and evaluate policy decisions to combat the spread of infectious diseases, such as coronavirus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Hyperbolic compartmental models for epidemic spread on networks with uncertain data: Application to the emergence of COVID-19 in Italy.
- Author
-
Bertaglia, Giulia and Pareschi, Lorenzo
- Subjects
EPIDEMICS ,COVID-19 ,HEAT equation ,FINITE volume method ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The importance of spatial networks in the spread of an epidemic is an essential aspect in modeling the dynamics of an infectious disease. Additionally, any realistic data-driven model must take into account the large uncertainty in the values reported by official sources such as the amount of infectious individuals. In this paper, we address the above aspects through a hyperbolic compartmental model on networks, in which nodes identify locations of interest such as cities or regions, and arcs represent the ensemble of main mobility paths. The model describes the spatial movement and interactions of a population partitioned, from an epidemiological point of view, on the basis of an extended compartmental structure and divided into commuters, moving on a suburban scale, and non-commuters, acting on an urban scale. Through a diffusive rescaling, the model allows us to recover classical diffusion equations related to commuting dynamics. The numerical solution of the resulting multiscale hyperbolic system with uncertainty is then tackled using a stochastic collocation approach in combination with a finite volume Implicit–Explicit (IMEX) method. The ability of the model to correctly describe the spatial heterogeneity underlying the spread of an epidemic in a realistic city network is confirmed with a study of the outbreak of COVID-19 in Italy and its spread in the Lombardy Region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Disability weights for infectious diseases in four European countries: comparison between countries and across respondent characteristics.
- Author
-
Maertens de Noordhout C, Devleesschauwer B, Salomon JA, Turner H, Cassini A, Colzani E, Speybroeck N, Polinder S, Kretzschmar ME, Havelaar AH, and Haagsma JA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Hungary epidemiology, Income, Italy epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Netherlands epidemiology, Sex Factors, Socioeconomic Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Sweden epidemiology, Young Adult, Communicable Diseases epidemiology, Cost of Illness, Disabled Persons statistics & numerical data, Health Surveys statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: In 2015, new disability weights (DWs) for infectious diseases were constructed based on data from four European countries. In this paper, we evaluated if country, age, sex, disease experience status, income and educational levels have an impact on these DWs., Methods: We analyzed paired comparison responses of the European DW study by participants' characteristics with separate probit regression models. To evaluate the effect of participants' characteristics, we performed correlation analyses between countries and within country by respondent characteristics and constructed seven probit regression models, including a null model and six models containing participants' characteristics. We compared these seven models using Akaike Information Criterion (AIC)., Results: According to AIC, the probit model including country as covariate was the best model. We found a lower correlation of the probit coefficients between countries and income levels (range rs: 0.97-0.99, P < 0.01) than between age groups (range rs: 0.98-0.99, P < 0.01), educational level (range rs: 0.98-0.99, P < 0.01), sex (rs = 0.99, P < 0.01) and disease status (rs = 0.99, P < 0.01). Within country the lowest correlations of the probit coefficients were between low and high income level (range rs = 0.89-0.94, P < 0.01)., Conclusions: We observed variations in health valuation across countries and within country between income levels. These observations should be further explored in a systematic way, also in non-European countries. We recommend future researches studying the effect of other characteristics of respondents on health assessment., (© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Public Health Association.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Questionable Immunity to Mumps among Healthcare Workers in Italy—A Cross-Sectional Serological Study.
- Author
-
Ferrari, Cristiana, Somma, Giuseppina, Treglia, Michele, Pallocci, Margherita, Passalacqua, Pierluigi, Di Giampaolo, Luca, and Coppeta, Luca
- Subjects
MEDICAL personnel ,MUMPS ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,OCCUPATIONAL health services ,VACCINATION status ,NEUTRALIZATION tests - Abstract
Highly contagious diseases, such as mumps, are a global concern as new epidemics continue to emerge, even in highly vaccinated populations. The risk of transmission and spread of these viruses is even higher for individuals who are more likely to be exposed, including healthcare workers (HCWs). In healthcare settings, both HCWs and patients are at risk of infection during the care process, potentially leading to nosocomial epidemic outbreaks. Mumps is often underestimated compared with measles and rubella, despite being milder and less likely to spread. In fact, the risk of complications following mumps infection is extremely high, especially if the disease occurs in adulthood. The measles–mumps–rubella (MMR) vaccine has been shown to be an excellent preventive measure. Unfortunately, the mumps component appears to be less effective in inducing immunity than those for measles and rubella (two-dose effectiveness of 85%, 95% and 97%, respectively). The main aim of our study was to investigate the prevalence of detectable mumps antibodies (serum IgG antibodies) in a cohort of Italian and foreign HCWs in relation to personal and occupational factors. We included in the study 468 subjects who underwent health surveillance at the Occupational Medicine Unit of the Tor Vergata Polyclinic in Rome during the period from January 2021 to March 2023. In our study, the proportion of HCWs found to be unprotected against mumps was very high (8.3%), and those found to be immune are below the WHO threshold for herd immunity (95%). From our data, it seems essential that all occupational health services carry out an accurate screening with a dose of anti-mumps antibodies to assess serological protection before starting a job, regardless of an individual's vaccination history. This approach is proving to be beneficial, accurate, as it allows all serologically non-immune individuals to be vaccinated in the workplace, including those who would be protected by their vaccination history but have lost the antibody response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. On the early detecting of the COVID-19 outbreak.
- Author
-
Oud, Mohammed Aba and Almuqrin, Muqrin
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 pandemic , *COVID-19 , *COMMUNICABLE diseases , *MOVING average process , *EPIDEMICS - Abstract
Introduction: This paper aims to measure the performance of early detection methods, which are usually used for infectious diseases. Methodology: By using real data of confirmed Coronavirus cases from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Italy, the moving epidemic method (MEM) and the moving average cumulative sums (Mov. Avg Cusum) methods are used in our simulation study. Results: Our results suggested that the CUSUM method outperforms the MEM in detecting the start of the Coronavirus outbreak. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Flu and Tdap Maternal Immunization Hesitancy in Times of COVID-19: An Italian Survey on Multiethnic Sample.
- Author
-
Cavaliere, Anna Franca, Zaami, Simona, Pallottini, Marta, Perelli, Federica, Vidiri, Annalisa, Marinelli, Enrico, Straface, Gianluca, Signore, Fabrizio, Scambia, Giovanni, and Marchi, Laura
- Subjects
INFLUENZA ,COVID-19 ,MEDICAL personnel ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,IMMUNIZATION ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Background: Tdap and flu immunization in pregnancy has been proven to be both effective and safe. Despite this, the vaccination rate in pregnant women is low in Italy. The COVID-19 pandemic has focused the attention of public opinion on communicable diseases, underlining the importance of primary prevention measures such as vaccination. We conducted a survey to investigate the behavior of pregnant women during the COVID-19 pandemic regarding maternal immunization to identify the reasons for vaccine hesitancy in order to overcome them. The new challenge is COVID-19 vaccination in pregnancy, and preliminary data show hesitancy towards it. Our analysis may be useful to improve immunization in the pregnant population, including through the COVID-19 vaccine. Methods: A targeted survey was performed in Italy including 520 women who experienced in the first trimester of pregnancy, prior to the novel coronavirus spread, the 2019–2020 influenza vaccination campaign and the Tdap vaccine recommendation in the third trimester during the COVID pandemic. They represent a unique model to investigate if the new coronavirus outbreak might have changed attitudes towards vaccination in pregnancy in the same patients. Data were collected from a self-completed paper questionnaire. Descriptive statistics were calculated and percentages were compared using the chi-2 test or Fisher's exact test. Results: We obtained data from 195 of the 520 women who gave birth during the inclusion period; 325 cases declined to participate in the survey. A total of 8.7% (17 cases) performed flu vaccination in the first trimester of pregnancy (pre-COVID era), 50.8% (99 cases) accepted Tdap immunization during their third trimester of gestation (COVID-19 pandemic) and 6.7% (13 cases) received both vaccines during pregnancy. For both the flu and Tdap shots, pregnant patients were more likely to accept the vaccines if they were recommended by a healthcare provider, whereas the main reason not to be vaccinated was the lack of such a recommendation. Conclusions: Our survey shows that the COVID-19 experience, which has raised awareness as to the role of vaccines in preventable diseases, may positively change attitudes toward immunization in pregnancy. Vaccination must be recommended to all pregnant women and organized during routine prenatal care as an important element for the prevention of communicable diseases. Vaccination hesitancy can be minimized through consistent recommendation to all pregnant women offered by obstetric staff during routine prenatal care. This approach is likely to be effective in terms of building trust in flu and Tdpa immunization among pregnant women, as well as to avoid unjustified hesitancy towards the more recent COVID-19 vaccines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Agent-Based Covid economics (ABC): Assessing non-pharmaceutical interventions and macro-stabilization policies.
- Author
-
Gatti, Domenico Delli and Reissl, Severin
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,ECONOMIC models ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
We employ a new macroeconomic–epidemiological agent-based model to evaluate the "lives vs livelihoods" trade-off brought to the fore by coronavirus disease (Covid-19). An infectious disease spreads across the network of agents' social and economic contacts and feeds back on the economic dimension of the model through various channels such as employment and consumption demand. Under a lockdown (LD) scenario, the model is able to closely reproduce the epidemiological dynamics of the first wave of the Covid-19 epidemic in the Lombardy region of Italy. We find that, in the presence of non-pharmaceutical interventions, there is no trade-off between lives and macroeconomic losses as a stricter LD eventually leads to superior outcomes along both dimensions. We also evaluate the efficacy of various macroeconomic stabilization policies designed to counteract the downturn generated by the epidemic and LD measures. In an agent-based setting we gain additional insights on the way in which such policies impact not only on gross domestic product but also, for instance, on firms' defaults and relative prices. Liquidity support for firms, a short-time working scheme with compensation for workers, and direct transfer to households stand out as the most effective policy tools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Predictors of Vaccination Intentions and Behaviour during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Italy.
- Author
-
Nerini, Amanda, Duradoni, Mirko, Matera, Camilla, Guazzini, Andrea, Paradisi, Monica, and Schembri, Adriele
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,PROTECTION motivation theory ,VACCINATION ,VACCINE hesitancy ,FEAR ,COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
The present research aimed at understanding individuals' vaccination intentions and protective behaviours against COVID-19 through two different studies. In Study 1 (N = 213, 73% women; mean age = 24.03) the Protection Motivation Theory model was tested considering the fear of COVID-19 as a possible mediator between threat appraisal (in terms of both health and social life) and intentions to get vaccinated when the vaccination was not yet available. Study 2 (N = 1111, 68.9% women; mean age = 38.33) was conducted when the vaccine became available for the entire population. Through this study, by adopting the 5C model of vaccine hesitancy as a theoretical framework, we aimed to understand how people who got vaccinated and the ones who did not differed, considering fear of vaccination, personality and vaccination hesitancy. In Study 1, social limitations, perceived severity and COVID-19 perceived vulnerability were significantly and positively related to fear of COVID-19. Contrary to what we expected, fear of COVID-19 was not a significant predictor of vaccination intention, which was predicted by both response efficacy and self-efficacy. In Study 2, in line with previous studies, vaccine hesitancy was negatively related to vaccination. More specifically, the social-oriented dimension of collective responsibility was the strongest predictor of effective behaviour. Our findings provide insights into the complexity of vaccine acceptance and emphasise the need for targeted interventions to promote vaccination and mitigate the spread of infectious diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Use of antimicrobials in companion animal practice: a retrospective study in a veterinary teaching hospital in Italy.
- Author
-
Escher M, Vanni M, Intorre L, Caprioli A, Tognetti R, and Scavia G
- Subjects
- Animals, Cats, Cross-Sectional Studies, Dogs, Drug Prescriptions statistics & numerical data, Drug Utilization statistics & numerical data, Hospitals, Animal, Hospitals, Teaching, Italy, Pets, Retrospective Studies, Anti-Infective Agents therapeutic use, Cat Diseases drug therapy, Communicable Diseases drug therapy, Dog Diseases drug therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: To describe the use of antimicrobials in a veterinary teaching hospital for companion animals in Italy, with particular regard to the agreement with recommendations of prudent use, Methods: The study was conducted with a retrospective, cross-sectional design. The population under investigation included 18,905 cats and dogs that were referred to the hospital between 2000 and 2007. Two different samples of the clinical paper forms were randomly selected to estimate the prevalence of animals receiving an antimicrobial prescription and to describe the pattern of antimicrobials used in relation to the condition being treated. The proportion of antimicrobials prescribed accomplishing recommendations of prudent use was also estimated, as well as the level of agreement with specific, diagnosis-based guidelines for antimicrobial use., Results: Broad-spectrum antimicrobials, including penicillins with β-lactamase inhibitors, first-generation cephalosporins and fluoroquinolones, were the most frequently prescribed compounds. Antimicrobials prescribed with the support of microbiological analyses and susceptibility testing were less than 5%. Among the recommendation of prudent use, the availability of information from laboratory testing had the poorest degree of agreement, while the other evaluated items were accomplished in most of the cases., Conclusions: Our results highlight the need to improve the procedures of antimicrobial prescription in the study setting. This can be achieved by supporting the guidance for antimicrobial use at the local level, with the adoption of specific guidelines, and at the national level with a further implementation of the policies of prudent prescriptions.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Water-related diseases outbreaks reported in Italy.
- Author
-
Blasi MF, Carere M, Pompa MG, Rizzuto E, and Funari E
- Subjects
- Food Microbiology, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Population Surveillance, Shellfish microbiology, Communicable Diseases epidemiology, Disease Outbreaks statistics & numerical data, Water Microbiology
- Abstract
Water related disease outbreak (WRDO) statistics in Italy from 1998 to 2005 have been discussed in this paper. The true incidence of WRDO is not reflected in the National Surveillance System (NSS), although this study has provided information on pathogens associated to different water sources, incidence in Regions and inadequacy of regulations. 192 outbreaks and 2546 cases of WRD were reported to the NSS, an average of 318 cases per year. Cases were associated to shellfish (58.79%), drinking water (39.94%) and agricultural products (1.25%). WRDs have been detected in 76% of Regions: central and southern Regions showed lower percentage of cases (35.4%) due to under-reporting. Most of WRD cases in the North were related to drinking water; WRDs in marine coastal Regions were mostly related to shellfish. 49% of Districts (Province) notified WRDs, including only 101 Municipalities. Pathogenic microorganisms were identified in a few cases from clinical investigations. They included enteric viruses, Norwalk viruses, Salmonella, Shigella, Giardia and Campylobacter. There is the need to improve the existing NSS in relation to WRDs. An adequate WRDs Surveillance System should be based on connection between health and environmental authorities, priority pathogens and critical areas identification, response capability and contingency plans.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Realistic population dynamics in epidemiological models: the impact of population decline on the dynamics of childhood infectious diseases. Measles in Italy as an example.
- Author
-
Manfredi P and Williams JR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Child, Preschool, Epidemiologic Factors, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Italy epidemiology, Male, Mathematics, Measles epidemiology, Middle Aged, Communicable Diseases epidemiology, Models, Biological, Population Dynamics
- Abstract
Most contributions in the field of mathematical modelling of childhood infectious diseases transmission dynamics have focused on stationary or exponentially growing populations. In this paper an epidemiological model with realistic demography is used to investigate the impact of the non-equilibrium conditions typical of the transition to sustained below replacement fertility (BRF) recently observed in a number of western countries, upon the transmission dynamics of measles. The results depend on the manner we model the relation between the (changing) age distribution of the population and contacts. Under some circumstances the transitional ageing phase typical of BRF populations might complexly interact with epidemiological variables leading to (i) a substantial reduction in the amount of vaccination effort required for eliminating the disease; (ii) a significant magnification of the perverse impact of vaccination in terms of the burden of severe age related morbidity.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Osteological Evidence of Possible Tuberculosis from the Early Medieval Age (6th–11th Century), Northern Italy.
- Author
-
Larentis, Omar, Pangrazzi, Caterina, and Tonina, Enrica
- Subjects
TUBERCULOSIS ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,HEALTH literacy ,MOTHER-child relationship ,HISTORICAL source material ,BIOSURVEILLANCE - Abstract
We discuss the probable presence of tuberculosis in non-adults of a medieval rural community in northern Italy with a biocultural perspective. Before birth, mother and child have a closely interconnected relationship, as suggested by the role of microchimerism on maternal health. To better understand maternal–child health and related stress factors, paleopathology has investigated the potential of this relationship in recent years. Diseases with environmental development factors such as infections depend on and are strongly affected by maternal control variables such as, for example, breastfeeding and the growth environment. This article presents ISZ2, the second possible case of childhood tuberculosis identified in northeastern Italy through recent paleopathological criteria. The subject is of primary importance as it not only represents a direct testimony of this infectious disease otherwise known only from historical sources, but also increases our knowledge on the state of health of infants in this area, which to date are scarcely analyzed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Awareness and perception of accuracy of the Undetectable=Untransmittable message (U=U) in Italy: results from a survey among PLWHA, infectious-diseases physicians and people having unprotected sex.
- Author
-
Cingolani, A., Tavelli, A., Calvino, G. V., Maggiolo, F., Girardi, E., Cozzi-Lepri, A., Perziano, A., Meli, P., Camposeragna, A., Mattioli, S., Calzavara, D., Gagliardini, R., Nozza, S., Antinori, A., and d'Arminio Monforte, A.
- Subjects
HIV infection transmission ,HIV-positive persons ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,RISK assessment ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,RESEARCH funding ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,UNSAFE sex ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Evidences on the absence of risk of sexual transmission of HIV by persons living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) with undetectable plasma HIV-RNA (HIV-RNA <200 copies/ml) led to the worldwide campaign "U = U" (undetectable = untransmittable). The purpose of this study was to evaluate the perceived accuracy of this message among PLWHA, HIV-negative people having unprotected sex (PHUS) and infectious diseases' (ID) physicians in Italy. A nationwide survey has been conducted using three different anonymous questionnaires (for ID physicians, PLWHA and PHUS). A total of 1121 participants filled the questionnaires: 397 PLWHA; 90 physicians; 634 PHUS. Awareness of U = U message has been reported in 74%, 92% and 47% of PLWHA, ID physicians and PHUS, respectively. The perception of accuracy of the U = U message among those aware was reported as high in 80.4%, 79.5% and 67.3% of PLWHA, ID physicians and PHUS, respectively. Physicians perceived that 11% of PLWHA have a high rate of perception of U = U, whereas among PLWHA, only 34% reported definitive positive messages from physicians. Discrepancies between awareness and perception of accuracy of the message U = U in PLWHA and physicians have been found, suggesting still low confidence in the community regarding the message itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Neglected Tropical Diseases in Italy: introducing IN-NTD, the Italian network for NTDs.
- Author
-
Casulli, Adriano, Antinori, Spinello, Bartoloni, Alessandro, D'Amelio, Stefano, Gabrielli, Albis Francesco, Gazzoli, Giovanni, Rinaldi, Laura, and Bruschi, Fabrizio
- Subjects
NEGLECTED diseases ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,LOW-income countries ,NONPROFIT organizations ,POOR communities - Abstract
The World Health Organization (WHO) defines neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) as a diverse group of primarily infectious diseases, which disproportionately affect poor and marginalized populations worldwide. In this context, NTDs are responsible for important morbidity and mortality and justify a global response. Moreover, NTDs are relatively neglected by research and development as well as by funding, if compared with the magnitude of the public health problem they represent. This happens even though, unlike other infectious diseases, they can be prevented, controlled and eliminated by targeted public health interventions. NTDs are mainly prevalent in communities from low-income countries in tropical and sub-tropical areas but are also present in upper–middle-income countries, including several in Europe. Here, we provide an update on the most relevant parasitic endemic or imported NTDs in Italy and illustrate the rationale for the establishment of the Italian network on NTDs, an alliance of scientific societies, institutes, foundations, universities and non-profit organizations united to fight NTDs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Invasive Meningococcal Disease and Meningococcal Serogroup B Vaccination in Adults and Their Offspring: Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices in Italy (2019).
- Author
-
Riccò, Matteo, Cerviere, Milena Pia, Marchesi, Federico, and Bottazzoli, Marco
- Subjects
MENINGOCOCCAL infections ,VACCINATION ,HEALTH attitudes ,MENINGOCOCCAL vaccines ,VACCINATION status ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,TRANSGENDER people - Abstract
Despite its effectiveness in preventing invasive meningococcal disease (IMD), pediatric uptake of recombinant meningococcal vaccination for serogroup B meningitis (MenB) is low in Italy. This study aimed to investigate knowledge, attitudes, and practice (KAP) about IMD and the vaccine uptake for MenB from July to December 2019, in a sample collected from a series of local Facebook discussion groups from the provinces of Parma and Reggio Emilia (North-Eastern Italy; 337,104 registered users). A self-administered anonymous web-based questionnaire was used to collect demographics, knowledge status, perceived risk for contracting meningitis, attitude towards the utility of meningococcal vaccine, and willingness to receive/perform MenB vaccine in their offspring. In total, 541 parents returned a fully completed questionnaire (response rate of 1.6% of potential recipients), with a mean age of 39.2 years ± 6.3 (78.1% females). Meningococcal infection was identified as severe or highly severe by most participants (88.9%), while it was recognized as being frequent/highly frequent in the general population by 18.6% of respondents. The overall knowledge status was unsatisfactory (57.6% ± 33.6 of correct answers to the knowledge test). Even though 63.4% of participants were somewhat favorable to MenB/MenC vaccines, offspring's vaccination towards MenB was reported by only 38.7% of participants. In a binary logistic regression model, the male gender of respondents (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 3.184, 95% confidence interval [95%CI] 1.772 to 5.721), living in a municipality >15,000 inhabitants (aOR 1.675, 95%CI 1.051 to 2.668), reporting a favorable attitude on meningococcus B vaccine (aOR 12.472, 95%CI 3.030 to 51.338), having been vaccinated against serogroup B (aOR 5.624, 95%CI 1.936 to 16.337) and/or serogroup C (aOR 2.652, 95%CI 1.442 to 4.872), and having previously vaccinated their offspring against serogroup C meningococcus (aOR 6.585, 95%CI 3.648 to 11.888) were characterized as positive effectors of offspring's vaccination. On the contrary, having a higher risk perception on vaccines was identified as the only negative effector (aOR 0.429, 95%CI 0.241 to 0.765). Our results hint towards extensive knowledge gaps on IMD and preventive interventions in the general population, suggesting that a positive attitude towards vaccines and vaccinations could be identified as the main effector also for MenB acceptance. Interventions in the general population aimed at improving confidence, compliance, and acknowledgment of the collective responsibility, as well as preventing actual constraints and the sharing of false beliefs on infectious diseases and their preventive measures, could therefore increase vaccination acceptance in both targeted individuals and their offspring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. A computational framework for modeling and studying pertussis epidemiology and vaccination.
- Author
-
Castagno, Paolo, Pernice, Simone, Ghetti, Gianni, Povero, Massimiliano, Pradelli, Lorenzo, Paolotti, Daniela, Balbo, Gianfranco, Sereno, Matteo, and Beccuti, Marco
- Subjects
WHOOPING cough vaccines ,EMERGING infectious diseases ,PETRI nets ,COMPUTER simulation ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,MATHEMATICAL models - Abstract
Background: Emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases such as Zika, SARS, ncovid19 and Pertussis, pose a compelling challenge for epidemiologists due to their significant impact on global public health. In this context, computational models and computer simulations are one of the available research tools that epidemiologists can exploit to better understand the spreading characteristics of these diseases and to decide on vaccination policies, human interaction controls, and other social measures to counter, mitigate or simply delay the spread of the infectious diseases. Nevertheless, the construction of mathematical models for these diseases and their solutions remain a challenging tasks due to the fact that little effort has been devoted to the definition of a general framework easily accessible even by researchers without advanced modelling and mathematical skills. Results: In this paper we describe a new general modeling framework to study epidemiological systems, whose novelties and strengths are: (1) the use of a graphical formalism to simplify the model creation phase; (2) the implementation of an R package providing a friendly interface to access the analysis techniques implemented in the framework; (3) a high level of portability and reproducibility granted by the containerization of all analysis techniques implemented in the framework; (4) a well-defined schema and related infrastructure to allow users to easily integrate their own analysis workflow in the framework. Then, the effectiveness of this framework is showed through a case of study in which we investigate the pertussis epidemiology in Italy. Conclusions: We propose a new general modeling framework for the analysis of epidemiological systems, which exploits Petri Net graphical formalism, R environment, and Docker containerization to derive a tool easily accessible by any researcher even without advanced mathematical and computational skills. Moreover, the framework was implemented following the guidelines defined by Reproducible Bioinformatics Project so it guarantees reproducible analysis and makes simple the developed of new user-defined workflows. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. A Survey from 2015 to 2019 to Investigate the Occurrence of Pesticide Residues in Dead Honeybees and Other Matrices Related to Honeybee Mortality Incidents in Italy.
- Author
-
Martinello, Marianna, Manzinello, Chiara, Borin, Alice, Avram, Larisa Elena, Dainese, Nicoletta, Giuliato, Ilenia, Gallina, Albino, and Mutinelli, Franco
- Subjects
PESTICIDE residues in food ,IMIDACLOPRID ,HONEYBEES ,PYRETHROIDS ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,MORTALITY ,PESTICIDES - Abstract
Honeybee health can be compromised not only by infectious and infesting diseases, but also by the acute or chronic action of certain pesticides. In recent years, there have been numerous reports of colony mortality by Italian beekeepers, but the investigations of these losses have been inconsistent, both in relation to the type of personnel involved (beekeepers, official veterinarians, members of the police force, etc.) and the procedures utilized. It was therefore deemed necessary to draw up national guidelines with the aim of standardizing sampling active ties. In this paper, we present the results of a survey carried out in Italy from 2015 to 2019, following these guidelines. Residues of 150 pesticides in 696 samples were analyzed by LC-MS/MS and GC-MS/MS. On average, 50% of the honeybee samples were positive for one or more pesticides with an average of 2 different pesticides per sample and a maximum of seven active ingredients, some of which had been banned in Europe or were not authorized in Italy. Insecticides were the most frequently detected, mainly belonging to the pyrethroid group (49%, above all tau-fluvalinate), followed by organophosphates (chlorpyrifos, 18%) and neonicotinoids (imidacloprid, 7%). This work provides further evidence of the possible relationship between complex pesticide exposure and honeybee mortality and/or depopulation of hives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Schoolteachers and Vaccinations: A Cross-Sectional Study in the Campania Region.
- Author
-
Pelullo, Concetta Paola, Corea, Francesco, Della Polla, Giorgia, Napolitano, Francesco, and Di Giuseppe, Gabriella
- Subjects
TEACHERS ,VACCINATION ,CROSS-sectional method ,STUDENT health ,COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
Background: This cross-sectional survey aimed to determine the knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors regarding vaccinations among schoolteachers in Italy. Methods: Data were collected through an online questionnaire from September 2020 to May 2021 from a sample of schoolteachers in the Campania region of southern Italy. Results: Only 27% of the participants had good knowledge about the vaccinations recommended for schoolteachers. Females who had children, who were unsatisfied by their health status, and not needing additional information about vaccinations were more likely to have good knowledge. Moreover, 61.5% perceived that vaccinations are useful in preventing infectious diseases, and 44.5% agreed or strongly agreed that vaccinations should be mandatory for schoolteachers. The results of multivariate logistic regression showed that schoolteachers who perceived that vaccinations are useful in preventing infectious diseases, who considered the recommended vaccinations to be useful to protecting their own and their students' health, who believed that information received about vaccination was useful, and who needed additional information about vaccinations recommended for schoolteachers, were significantly more likely to agree or strongly agree that vaccinations should be mandatory for schoolteachers. Conclusions: These findings suggest the need for education strategies to ensure that schoolteachers are better informed about vaccinations recommended for their profession. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. What is the impact of SARS-CoV-2 pandemic on antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs)? The results of a survey among a regional network of infectious disease centres.
- Author
-
Comelli, Agnese, Genovese, Camilla, Lombardi, Andrea, Bobbio, Chiara, Scudeller, Luigia, Restelli, Umberto, Muscatello, Antonio, Antinori, Spinello, Bonfanti, Paolo, Casari, Salvatore, Castagna, Antonella, Castelli, Francesco, Monforte, Antonella d'Arminio, Franzetti, Fabio, Grossi, Paolo, Lupi, Matteo, Morelli, Paola, Piconi, Stefania, Puoti, Massimo, and Pusterla, Luigi
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,ANTIMICROBIAL stewardship ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,MULTIDRUG resistance ,DRUG resistance in microorganisms - Abstract
Discontinuation of antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) and increased antibiotic use were described during SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. In order to measure COVID-19 impact on ASPs in a setting of high multidrug resistance organisms (MDRO) prevalence, a qualitative survey was designed. In July 2021, eighteen ID Units were asked to answer a questionnaire about their hospital characteristics, ASPs implementation status before the pandemic and impact of SARS-CoV-2 pandemic on ASPs after the 1st and 2nd pandemic waves in Italy. Nine ID centres (50%) reported a reduction of ASPs and in 7 cases (38.9%) these were suspended. After the early pandemic waves, the proportion of centres that restarted their ASPs was higher among the ID centres where antimicrobial stewardship was formally identified as a priority objective (9/11, 82%, vs 2/7, 28%). SARS-CoV-2 pandemic had a severe impact in ASPs in a region highly affected by COVID-19 and antimicrobial resistance but weaknesses related to the pre-existent ASPs might have played a role. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. First Human Case of Tick-Borne Encephalitis in Non-Endemic Region in Italy: A Case Report.
- Author
-
Barp, Nicole, Cappi, Cinzia, Meschiari, Marianna, Battistel, Marzia, Libbra, Maria Vittoria, Ferri, Maria Alice, Ballestri, Stefano, Gallerani, Altea, Ferrari, Filippo, Meacci, Marisa, Sarti, Mario, Capitelli, Mariano, Mussini, Cristina, and Franceschini, Erica
- Subjects
TICK-borne encephalitis ,TICK-borne encephalitis viruses ,VIRUS diseases ,TICK-borne diseases ,COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
Tick-borne encephalitis (TBE), a human viral infectious disease caused by the tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV), is emerging in Italy, especially in the north-eastern area. No human cases of autochthonous TBE have been reported in Italy's central regions (such as Emilia-Romagna, Italy). However, here we describe the first human case of TBEV infection in this region, pointing to endemic transmission of TBEV, supporting the concept of circulation of TBEV and of the presence of a possible hot spot in the Serramazzoni region in the Emilian Apennines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Disease epidemiology and earthquake disaster. The example of Southern Italy after the 23 November 1980 earthquake.
- Author
-
Alexander D
- Subjects
- Communicable Disease Control, Community Health Centers, Humans, Italy, Risk, Sanitation, Communicable Diseases epidemiology, Disasters, Disease Outbreaks prevention & control
- Abstract
This paper describes aspects of the epidemiological situation following the November 1980 earthquake disaster in Campania and Basilicata, southern Italy. First, population displacements and the fluctuating state of homelessness after the catastrophe are described. Secondly, the level of medical provision prior to the disaster is assessed and damage caused by the earthquake to the medical care and sanitation infrastructures is outlined. Thirdly, the publicity given by news media to the threat of disease is examined and compared with the official government reaction, which took the form of emergency medical provision and intervention against the supposed threat of disease. The national epidemiological surveillance system, which was set up during the aftermath of the disaster, is outlined and some of its results, describing the post-impact epidemiological situation in the disaster zone, are examined. Despite the chaotic situation following the earthquake and the publicity given to the threat of disease outbreaks, there were no serious epidemics and the hospital system was able to cope with the aftermath. The government program of vaccinating survivors and relief volunteers can therefore be seen as an over-reaction to the prevailing situation, although continuing disease surveillance was probably a wise precaution.
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Differential mortality of infectious disease in Italian polities: COVID-19, past plague epidemics, and currently endemic respiratory disease.
- Author
-
Jurgensen, JohnMichael, Peñaherrera-Aguirre, Mateo, and Figueredo, Aurelio José
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 , *PLAGUE , *COMMUNICABLE diseases , *RESPIRATORY diseases , *COVID-19 pandemic , *EPIDEMICS - Abstract
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has harshly impacted Italy since its arrival in February 2020. In particular, provinces in Italy's Central and Northern macroregions have dealt with disproportionately greater case prevalence and mortality rates than those in the South. In this paper, we compare the morbidity and mortality dynamics of 16th and 17th century Plague outbreaks with those of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic across Italian regions. We also include data on infectious respiratory diseases which are presently endemic to Italy in order to analyze the regional differences between epidemic and endemic disease. A Growth Curve Analysis allowed for the estimation of time-related intercepts and slopes across the 16th and 17th centuries. Those statistical parameters were later incorporated as criterion variables in multiple General Linear Models. These statistical examinations determined that the Northern macroregion had a higher intercept than the Southern macroregion. This indicated that provinces located in Northern Italy had historically experienced higher plague mortalities than Southern polities. The analyses also revealed that this geographical differential in morbidity and mortality persists to this day, as the Northern macroregion has experienced a substantially higher COVID-19 mortality than the Southern macroregion. These results are consistent with previously published analyses. The only other stable and significant predictor of epidemic disease mortality was foreign urban potential, a measure of the degree of interconnectedness between 16th and 17th century Italian cities. Foreign urban potential was negatively associated with plague slope and positively associated with plague intercept, COVID-19 mortality, GDP per capita, and immigration per capita. Its substantial contribution in predicting both past and present outcomes provides a temporal continuity not seen in any other measure tested here. Overall, this study provides compelling evidence that temporally stable geographical factors, impacting both historical and current foreign pathogen spread above and beyond other hypothesized predictors, underlie the disproportionate impact COVID-19 has had throughout Central and Northern Italian provinces. • Historical plague and COVID-19 afflicted many of the same present-day Italian regions. • Geography underpins the associations of many predictors of Italian epidemic mortality. • Central and Northern Italian regions are disproportionately afflicted by epidemics. • Social biogeography gives insights into mortality of historical plague and COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Prevalence and related factors of child posttraumatic stress disorder during COVID-19 pandemic: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
-
Fan Yang, Jiaxing Wen, Ning Huang, Riem, Madelon M. E., Lodder, Paul, and Jing Guo
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,DISEASE prevalence ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,CHILD development - Abstract
Background. The COVID-19 pandemic has drastically impacted many aspects of society and has indirectly produced various psychological consequences. This systematic review aimed to estimate the worldwide prevalence of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in children due to the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as to identify protective or risk factors contributing to child PTSD. Methods. We conducted a systematic literature search in the PubMed, ProQuest, PsycINFO, Embase, Web of Science, WanFang, CNKI, and VIP databases. We searched for studies published between January 1, 2020 and May 26, 2021, that reported the prevalence of child PTSD due to the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as factors contributing to child PTSD. Eighteen studies were included in our systematic review, of which 10 studies were included in the meta-analysis. Results. The estimated prevalence of child PTSD after the COVID-19 outbreak was 28.15% (95% CI: 19.46–36.84%, I 2 = 99.7%). In subgroup analyses for specific regions the estimated prevalence of post-pandemic child PTSD was 19.61% (95% CI: 11.23–27.98%) in China, 50.8% (95% CI: 34.12–67.49%) in the USA, and 50.08% in Italy (95% CI: 47.32–52.84%). Conclusions. Factors contributing to child PTSD were categorized into four aspects: personal factors, family factors, social factors and infectious diseases related factors. Based on this, we presented a new framework summarizing the occurrence and influence of the COVID-19 related child PTSD, which may contribute to a better understanding, prevention and development of interventions for child PTSD in forthcoming pandemics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Risk of Reactivation of Latent Tuberculosis in Psoriasis Patients on Biologic Therapies: A Retrospective Cohort from a Tertiary Care Centre in Northern Italy.
- Author
-
MASTORINO, Luca, DAPAVO, Paolo, TRUNFIO, Mattia, AVALLONE, Gianluca, RUBATTO, Marco, CALCAGNO, Andrea, RIBERO, Simone, and QUAGLINO, Pietro
- Subjects
LATENT tuberculosis ,TUBERCULOSIS patients ,BIOTHERAPY ,TERTIARY care ,COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
Psoriatic patients with latent tuberculosis infection and properly treated active tuberculosis need careful management when prescribing modern biological drugs. Although data and guidelines regarding tumour necrosis factor-α inhibitors advise caution and initiation of prophylactic therapy in patients with latent tuberculosis infection, the same indications do not seem to find equal force for interleukin (IL)-23 and IL-17 inhibitors. In order to evaluate the risk of reactivation in patients with latent tuberculosis infection or properly treated active tuberculosis, an observational retrospective study was conducted on the population referred to our centre at Dermatologic Clinic of University of Turin, Italy. In the last 10 years at the clinic 19 psoriatic patients were found to be at risk of tuberculosis reactivation: 10 patients were QuantiFERON-TB-positive at baseline, 2 became positive during treatment, 6 reported prior tuberculous infection, and 1 was QuantiFERON-TB-negative at baseline and developed disseminated tuberculosis during treatment with anti-tumour necrosis factor-α. Overall, 10.5% of this group of patients developed active tuberculosis; however, stratifying by biologic therapy, zero cases were observed among patients treated with anti-IL-17, -23, or -12/23 over a relatively long followup (48.1 months) A review of the available literature following our experience confirms the increased risk of tuberculosis reactivation with tumour necrosis factor-α inhibitors. Concerning anti-IL-23 and IL-17 drugs, available data showed high safety in patients at risk of tuberculosis reactivation. Screening of patients who should be taking IL-17 and IL-23 inhibitors is recommended for public health purposes. In case of a positive result with these therapies, consulting with an infectious diseases specialist is suggested in order to weigh up the risks and benefits of prophylactic treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Developments in pediatrics in 2020: choices in allergy, autoinflammatory disorders, critical care, endocrinology, genetics, infectious diseases, microbiota, neonatology, neurology, nutrition, ortopedics, respiratory tract illnesses and rheumatology.
- Author
-
Caffarelli, Carlo, Santamaria, Francesca, Procaccianti, Michela, Piro, Ettore, delle Cave, Valeria, Borrelli, Melissa, Santoro, Angelica, Grassi, Federica, Bernasconi, Sergio, and Corsello, Giovanni
- Subjects
RESPIRATORY diseases ,ENDOCRINOLOGY ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,GENETICS ,INFLAMMATION ,GUT microbiome ,NUTRITION ,PEDIATRICS ,GENETIC disorders ,CRITICAL care medicine ,ALLERGIES ,ORTHOPEDICS ,RHEUMATISM ,DIFFUSION of innovations - Abstract
In this article, we describe the advances in the field of pediatrics that have been published in the Italian Journal of Pediatrics in 2020. We report progresses in understanding allergy, autoinflammatory disorders, critical care, endocrinology, genetics, infectious diseases, microbiota, neonatology, neurology, nutrition, orthopedics, respiratory tract illnesses, rheumatology in childhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Homogenous mixing and network approximations in discrete-time formulation of a SIRS model.
- Author
-
Renna, Ilaria
- Subjects
ENDEMIC diseases ,COVID-19 ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,TIME-varying networks ,TIME series analysis ,EPIDEMICS - Abstract
A discrete-time deterministic epidemic model is proposed to better understand the contagious dynamics and the behaviour observed in the incidence of real infectious diseases. For this purpose, we analyse a SIRS model both in a random-mixing approach and in a small-world network formulation. The models include the basic parameters that characterize an epidemic: infection and recovery times, as well as mechanisms of contagion. Depending on the parameters, the random-mixing model has different types of behaviour of an epidemic: pathogen extinction; endemic infection; sustained oscillations and dynamic extinction. Spatial effects are included in our network-based approach, where each individual of a population is represented by a node of a small-world network. Our network-based approach includes rewiring connections to account for time-varying network structure, a consequence of the natural response to the emergence of an epidemic (e.g. avoiding contacts with infected individuals). Random and adaptive rewiring conditions are analysed and numerical simulation are made. A comparison of model predictions with the actual effects of COVID-19 infection on population that occurred in Italy and France is produced. Results of the time series of infected people show that our adaptive evolving networks represent effective strategies able to decrease the epidemic spreading. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. A model for the spread of infectious diseases compatible with case data.
- Author
-
Huang, Norden E., Qiao, Fangli, Wang, Qian, Qian, Hong, and Tung, Ka-Kit
- Subjects
INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,HERD immunity ,COVID-19 pandemic ,BASIC reproduction number ,EPIDEMICS - Abstract
For epidemics such as COVID-19, with a significant population having asymptomatic, untested infection, model predictions are often not compatible with data reported only for the cases confirmed by laboratory tests. Additionally, most compartmental models have instantaneous recovery from infection, contrary to observation. Tuning such models with observed data to obtain the unknown infection rate is an ill-posed problem. Here, we derive from the first principle an epidemiological model with delay between the newly infected (N) and recovered (R) populations. To overcome the challenge of incompatibility between model and case data, we solve for the ratios of the observed quantities and show that log(N(t)/R(t)) should follow a straight line. This simple prediction tool is accurate in hindcasts verified using data for China and Italy. In traditional epidemiology, an epidemic wanes when much of the population is infected so that 'herd immunity' is achieved. For a highly contagious and deadly disease, herd immunity is not a feasible goal without human intervention or vaccines. Even before the availability of vaccines, the epidemic was suppressed with social measures in China and South Korea with much less than 5% of the population infected. Effects of social behaviour should be and are incorporated in our model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Effective Containment of a COVID-19 Subregional Outbreak in Italy Through Strict Quarantine and Rearrangement of Local Health Care Services.
- Author
-
Tedeschi, Sara, Badia, Lorenzo, Berveglieri, Fabio, Ferrari, Rodolfo, Coladonato, Simona, Gabrielli, Sabrina, Maestri, Antonio, Peroni, Gabriele, Giannella, Maddalena, Rossi, Andrea, Viale, Pierluigi, and Team, COVID-19 Fighting
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,MEDICAL care ,COVID-19 ,REVERSE transcriptase polymerase chain reaction ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,TELEPHONE in medicine ,HOSPITAL closures - Abstract
Background Since the beginning of the pandemic, the epidemiology of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Italy has been characterized by the occurrence of subnational outbreaks. The World Health Organization recommended building the capacity to rapidly control COVID-19 clusters of cases in order to avoid the spread of the disease. This study describes a subregional outbreak of COVID-19 that occurred in the Emilia Romagna region, Italy, and the intervention undertaken to successfully control it. Methods Cases of COVID-19 were defined by a positive reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) on nasopharyngeal swab. The outbreak involved the residential area of a small town, with ~10 500 inhabitants in an area of 9 km
2 . After the recognition of the outbreak, local health care authorities implemented strict quarantine and a rearrangement of health care services, consisting of closure of general practitioner outpatient clinics, telephone contact with all residents, activation of health care units to visit at-home patients with symptoms consistent with COVID-19, and a dedicated Infectious Diseases ambulatory unit at the nearest hospital. Results The outbreak lasted from February 24 to April 6, 2020, involving at least 170 people with a cumulative incidence of 160 cases/10 000 inhabitants; overall, 448 inhabitants of the municipality underwent at least 1 nasopharyngeal swab to detect SARS-CoV-2 (positivity rate, 38%). Ninety-three people presented symptoms before March 11 (pre-intervention period), and 77 presented symptoms during the postintervention period (March 11–April 6). Conclusions It was possible to control this COVID-19 outbreak by prompt recognition and implementation of a targeted local intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Innovative procedures for micro‐elimination of HCV infection in persons who use drugs.
- Author
-
Messina, Vincenzo, Russo, Antonio, Parente, Enrico, Russo, Giovanni, Raimondo, Tiziana, Salzillo, Angela, Simeone, Filomena, Onorato, Lorenzo, Di Caprio, Giovanni, Pisaturo, Mariantonietta, and Coppola, Nicola
- Subjects
DRUG abuse ,SUBSTANCE-induced disorders ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,PATIENT care ,INFECTION - Abstract
People who use drugs are a key population in global HCV control. We evaluated the efficacy of an innovative model to eliminate HCV infection in a high‐risk population of PWUD in a service for substance use disorder (SUD). Between January 2018 and December 2018, we conducted a prospective, interventional, before and after study, based on audits performed by Infectious Diseases physicians in a SUD facility in Piedimonte Matese, in southern Italy, to improve the knowledge about HCV infection; a shared protocol for screening and linkage to care of patients was implemented. The pre‐intervention period was defined as January‐December 2017 and the post‐intervention period as January‐December 2018. The subjects followed up at SUD facility in the pre‐intervention and post‐intervention periods were 318 and 275, respectively. Compared with the pre‐intervention period, the number of anti‐HCV–positive subjects tested for HCV RNA was higher in the post‐intervention period (91% vs 27%, P <.0001), as was the number who started directly acting antivirals (DAAs). Of the 18 HCV RNA–positive subjects in the pre‐intervention period, only 3 (16.6%) started DAA, a percentage decisively lower than that observed after the start of the programme, 63 (84%) of 75 subjects (P <.0001), and all obtained SVR. The data were similar for people who inject drugs (PWID) and non‐PWID sub‐populations. The use of our innovative model with close interaction between the Infectious Disease Unit and the SUD facility determined a significant increase in HCV RNA testing, linkage to care and the start of DAA in the PWUD population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Pairwise likelihood estimation of latent autoregressive count models.
- Author
-
Pedeli, Xanthi and Varin, Cristiano
- Subjects
AUTOREGRESSIVE models ,MENINGOCOCCAL infections ,TIME series analysis ,NUMERICAL integration ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,COMPUTER simulation ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,STATISTICAL models ,PROBABILITY theory - Abstract
Latent autoregressive models are useful time series models for the analysis of infectious disease data. Evaluation of the likelihood function of latent autoregressive models is intractable and its approximation through simulation-based methods appears as a standard practice. Although simulation methods may make the inferential problem feasible, they are often computationally intensive and the quality of the numerical approximation may be difficult to assess. We consider instead a weighted pairwise likelihood approach and explore several computational and methodological aspects including estimation of robust standard errors and the role of numerical integration. The suggested approach is illustrated using monthly data on invasive meningococcal disease infection in Greece and Italy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. COVID-19: beta-thalassemia subjects immunised?
- Author
-
Lansiaux, Edouard, Pébaÿ, Philippe Pierre, Picard, Jean-Laurent, and Son-Forget, Joachim
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,RESPIRATORY diseases ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,HEMOGLOBINS ,BETA-Thalassemia ,VIRAL pneumonia ,RESEARCH ,IMMUNIZATION ,RESEARCH methodology ,IMMUNE system ,REGRESSION analysis ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,GENETIC carriers ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EPIDEMICS ,DISEASE prevalence ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
The novel coronavirus pneumonia (COVID-19) is a contagious acute respiratory infectious disease whose causative agent has been demonstrated to be a novel virus of the coronavirus family, SARSCoV-2. A recent PRE-print study has showed a heme attack on the 1-beta chain of hemoglobin by COVID19. Beta-thalassemia results of a default in the hemoglobin beta-chain synthesis. 1,5% global population are heterozygotes for this disease. In this study, by a multiple linear regression, we have analyzed the evolution of COVID-19 infection in three Italian regions (Puglia, Sardinia, Sicilia) with different beta-thalassemic prevalences, in order to search a link. The results have showed that betathalassemic heterozygote population prevalence is correlated to immunity against COVID-19, by a regression. This paper is only for academic discussion, the hypotheses and conclusions needs to be confirmed by further research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Vaginal delivery in SARS-CoV-2-infected pregnant women in Northern Italy: a retrospective analysis.
- Author
-
Ferrazzi, E, Frigerio, L, Savasi, V, Vergani, P, Prefumo, F, Barresi, S, Bianchi, S, Ciriello, E, Facchinetti, F, Gervasi, MT, Iurlaro, E, Kustermann, A, Mangili, G, Mosca, F, Patanè, L, Spazzini, D, Spinillo, A, Trojano, G, Vignali, M, and Villa, A
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,PREGNANT women ,INTENSIVE care units ,CESAREAN section ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COMMUNICABLE disease diagnosis ,VIRAL pneumonia ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,VAGINA ,PREGNANCY complications ,EPIDEMICS ,DELIVERY (Obstetrics) ,VERTICAL transmission (Communicable diseases) ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
Objective: To report mode of delivery and immediate neonatal outcome in women infected with COVID-19.Design: Retrospective study.Setting: Twelve hospitals in northern Italy.Participants: Pregnant women with COVID-19-confirmed infection who delivered.Exposure: COVID 19 infection in pregnancy.Methods: SARS-CoV-2-infected women who were admitted and delivered from 1 to 20 March 2020 were eligible. Data were collected from the clinical records using a standardised questionnaire on maternal general characteristics, any medical or obstetric co-morbidity, course of pregnancy, clinical signs and symptoms, treatment of COVID 19 infection, mode of delivery, neonatal data and breastfeeding.Main Outcome and Measures: Data on mode of delivery and neonatal outcome.Results: In all, 42 women with COVID-19 delivered at the participating centres; 24 (57.1%, 95% CI 41.0-72.3) delivered vaginally. An elective caesarean section was performed in 18/42 (42.9%, 95% CI 27.7-59.0) cases: in eight cases the indication was unrelated to COVID-19 infection. Pneumonia was diagnosed in 19/42 (45.2%, 95% CI 29.8-61.3) cases: of these, 7/19 (36.8%, 95% CI 16.3-61.6) required oxygen support and 4/19 (21.1%, 95% CI 6.1-45.6) were admitted to a critical care unit. Two women with COVID-19 breastfed without a mask because infection was diagnosed in the postpartum period: their newborns tested positive for SARS-Cov-2 infection. In one case, a newborn had a positive test after a vaginal operative delivery.Conclusions: Although postpartum infection cannot be excluded with 100% certainty, these findings suggest that vaginal delivery is associated with a low risk of intrapartum SARS-Cov-2 transmission to the newborn.Tweetable Abstract: This study suggests that vaginal delivery may be associated with a low risk of intrapartum SARS-Cov-2 transmission to the newborn. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Lifestyle as Risk Factor for Infectious Causes of Death in Young Dogs: A Retrospective Study in Southern Italy (2015–2017).
- Author
-
Cardillo, Lorena, Piegari, Giuseppe, Iovane, Valentina, Viscardi, Maurizio, Alfano, Flora, Cerrone, Anna, Pagnini, Ugo, Montagnaro, Serena, Galiero, Giorgio, Pisanelli, Giuseppe, and Fusco, Giovanna
- Subjects
CAUSES of death ,CANINE distemper virus ,PARVOVIRUSES ,CANINE parvovirus ,DOGS ,CLOSTRIDIUM perfringens ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,ADENOVIRUS diseases - Abstract
Infectious diseases are a common cause of death in young dogs. Several factors are thought to predispose young dogs to microbiological infections. Identifying the cause of death is often a challenge, and broad diagnostic analysis is often needed. Here, we aimed to determine the infectious causes of death in young dogs aged up to 1 year, examining how it relates to age (under and over 6 months), lifestyle (owned versus ownerless), breed (purebred and crossbreed), and gender. A retrospective study was conducted in a 3-year period (2015–2017) on 138 dead dogs that had undergone necropsy and microbiological diagnostics. Enteritis and pneumonia were the most commonly observed lesions. Polymicrobism was more prevalent (62.3%) than single-agent infections and associated with a higher rate of generalised lesions. Ownerless dogs showed over a three-fold higher predisposition to viral coinfections than owned dogs. Above all, canine parvovirus was the most prevalent agent (77.5%), followed by canine coronavirus (31.1%) and canine adenovirus (23.9%); ownerless pups had a higher predisposition to these viruses. Escherichia coli (23.9%), Clostridium perfringens type A (18.1%), and Enterococcus spp. (8.7%) were the most commonly identified bacteria, which mostly involved in coinfections. A lower prevalence of CDV and Clostridium perfringens type A was observed in puppies under 6 months of age. In conclusion, this study is the first comprehensive survey on a wide panel of microbiological agents related to necropsy lesions. It lays the groundwork for future studies attempting to understand the circulation of infectious agents in a determined area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Towards a data-driven characterization of behavioral changes induced by the seasonal flu.
- Author
-
Gozzi, Nicolò, Perrotta, Daniela, Paolotti, Daniela, and Perra, Nicola
- Subjects
BEHAVIOR ,INFLUENZA ,HEALTH Belief Model ,HUMAN behavior ,COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
In this work, we aim to determine the main factors driving self-initiated behavioral changes during the seasonal flu. To this end, we designed and deployed a questionnaire via Influweb, a Web platform for participatory surveillance in Italy, during the 2017 − 18 and 2018 − 19 seasons. We collected 599 surveys completed by 434 users. The data provide socio-demographic information, level of concerns about the flu, past experience with illnesses, and the type of behavioral changes voluntarily implemented by each participant. We describe each response with a set of features and divide them in three target categories. These describe those that report i) no (26%), ii) only moderately (36%), iii) significant (38%) changes in behaviors. In these settings, we adopt machine learning algorithms to investigate the extent to which target variables can be predicted by looking only at the set of features. Notably, 66% of the samples in the category describing more significant changes in behaviors are correctly classified through Gradient Boosted Trees. Furthermore, we investigate the importance of each feature in the classification task and uncover complex relationships between individuals' characteristics and their attitude towards behavioral change. We find that intensity, recency of past illnesses, perceived susceptibility to and perceived severity of an infection are the most significant features in the classification task and are associated to significant changes in behaviors. Overall, the research contributes to the small set of empirical studies devoted to the data-driven characterization of behavioral changes induced by infectious diseases. Author summary: Human behavior and infectious diseases are linked by a feedback loop. While individuals might change their behavior as a response to an epidemic, such changes might influence the spreading itself. So far, our understanding and characterization of behavioral changes induced by diseases has been strongly limited by the lack of empirical data. As result, the vast majority of research has been focused on theoretical, what if, scenarios. In this work, we collected a unique dataset comprised of 599 surveys submitted by 434 users to the participatory surveillance platform Influweb over the 2017 − 18 and 2018 − 19 flu seasons. The data provide socio-demographic information, level of concerns about the flu, past experience with illnesses, and the type of self-initiated behavioral changes implemented by each participant. Our analysis, conducted adopting machine learning algorithms, show that both past experience of illness and personal beliefs about the disease are fundamental drivers of behavioral change. These findings are in good agreement with the constructs of the Health Belief Model and provide, to the best of our knowledge, the first data driven characterization of behavioral changes during the seasonal flu. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Clinical Diagnostic Testing for Human Cytomegalovirus Infections.
- Author
-
Razonable, Raymund R, Inoue, Naoki, Pinninti, Swetha G, Boppana, Suresh B, Lazzarotto, Tiziana, Gabrielli, Liliana, Simonazzi, Giuliana, Pellett, Philip E, and Schmid, D Scott
- Subjects
HUMAN cytomegalovirus diseases ,DIAGNOSIS methods ,HUMAN cytomegalovirus ,CHILDREN with disabilities ,KIDNEY transplant complications ,COMMUNICABLE disease diagnosis ,CYTOMEGALOVIRUS disease diagnosis ,CYTOMEGALOVIRUSES ,NEWBORN screening ,MOLECULAR diagnosis ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,PRENATAL diagnosis ,CYTOMEGALOVIRUS diseases ,PREGNANCY complications ,ROUTINE diagnostic tests ,VERTICAL transmission (Communicable diseases) ,DISEASE management ,TRANSPLANTATION of organs, tissues, etc. ,ALGORITHMS ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infections are among the most common complications arising in transplant patients, elevating the risk of various complications including loss of graft and death. HCMV infections are also responsible for more congenital infections worldwide than any other agent. Congenital HCMV (cCMV) infections are the leading nongenetic cause of sensorineural hearing loss and a source of significant neurological disabilities in children. While there is overlap in the clinical and laboratory approaches to diagnosis of HCMV infections in these settings, the management, follow-up, treatment, and diagnostic strategies differ considerably. As yet, no country has implemented a universal screening program for cCMV. Here, we summarize the issues, limitations, and application of diagnostic strategies for transplant recipients and congenital infection, including examples of screening programs for congenital HCMV that have been implemented at several centers in Japan, Italy, and the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Virological response and retention in care according to time of starting ART in Italy: data from the Icona Foundation Study cohort.
- Author
-
Monforte, Antonella d'Arminio, Tavelli, Alessandro, Cozzi-Lepri, Alessandro, Castagna, Antonella, Passerini, Simone, Francisci, Daniela, Saracino, Annalisa, Maggiolo, Franco, Lapadula, Giuseppe, Girardi, Enrico, Perno, Carlo Federico, Antinori, Andrea, Group, Icona Foundation Study, d'Arminio Monforte, Antonella, and Icona Foundation Study Group
- Subjects
CD4 lymphocyte count ,COHORT analysis ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
Objectives: To describe: (i) factors associated with rapid and delayed ART initiation; (ii) rates of 12 week virological response; and (iii) virologically controlled retention in care by 1 year from ART initiation according to timing of start in a real-life setting.Methods: All individuals in the Icona cohort diagnosed with HIV in 2016-17 who initiated ART were grouped according to the time between HIV diagnosis and ART initiation: Group 1, ≤7 days; Group 2, 8-14 days; Group 3, 15-30 days; Group 4, 31-120 days; and Group 5, >120 days. Multivariable logistic regression models were used to identify factors associated with: (i) the probability of rapid (Group 1) and very delayed (Group 5) ART initiation; (ii) the 12 week virological response (by a modified snapshot algorithm); and (iii) the probability of retention in care at 1 year (on ART with HIV-RNA <50 copies/mL).Results: A total of 1247 individuals were included [82 (6.6%) in Group 1, 115 (9.2%) in Group 2, 267 (21.4%) in Group 3, 641 (51.4%) in Group 4 and 142 (11.4%) in Group 5]. Main predictors of rapid ART start (Group 1) were low CD4 cell count and high HIV-RNA at first contact with the infectious diseases centre. There was no association between probability of virological response and timing of ART initiation. Overall, 90% of individuals remained on ART after 1 year, 91% with undetectable HIV-RNA. Participants of Italian nationality, those with higher CD4 cell count and lower HIV-RNA at ART initiation were more likely to be retained in care after 1 year.Conclusions: In our high-income observational setting, we did not observe differences in the 1 year rate of virological response and retention in care according to timing of ART initiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. A novel grey model based on traditional Richards model and its application in COVID-19.
- Author
-
Luo, Xilin, Duan, Huiming, and Xu, Kai
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 , *SARS-CoV-2 , *GENETIC algorithms , *COMMUNICABLE diseases , *PREDICTION models - Abstract
• A novel grey Richards model GERM(1,1, e a t) is proposed. • The optimal nonlinear terms and background value of the novel model are determined by Genetic algorithm. • The comparative study shows that the new model is superior to the other seven benchmark models. • The predict the daily number of new confirmed cases of COVID-19 of four regions are projected. In 2020, a new type of coronavirus is in the global pandemic. Now, the number of infected patients is increasing. The trend of the epidemic has attracted global attention. Based on the traditional Richards model and the differential information principle in grey prediction model, this paper uses the modified grey action quantity to propose a new grey prediction model for infectious diseases. This model weakens the dependence of the Richards model on single-peak and saturated S-shaped data, making Richards model more applicable, and uses genetic algorithm to optimize the nonlinear terms and the background value. To illustrate the effectiveness of the model, groups of slowly growing small-sample and large-sample data are selected for simulation experiments. Results of eight evaluation indexes show that the new model is better than the traditional GM(1,1) and grey Richards model. Finally, this model is applied to China, Italy, Britain and Russia. The results show that the new model is better than the other 7 models. Therefore, this model can effectively predict the number of daily new confirmed cases of COVID-19, and provide important prediction information for the formulation of epidemic prevention policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Hepatitis C virus infection: a challenge in the complex management of two cases of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis.
- Author
-
Musso, Maria, Mosti, Silvia, Gualano, Gina, Mencarini, Paola, Urso, Rocco, Ghirga, Piero, Rianda, Alessia, Del Nonno, Franca, Goletti, Delia, and Palmieri, Fabrizio
- Subjects
HEPATITIS C virus ,VIRUS diseases ,CHRONIC hepatitis C ,MULTIDRUG-resistant tuberculosis ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,ANTITUBERCULAR agents - Abstract
Background: Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) requires lengthy use of second-line drugs, burdened by many side effects. Hepatitis C virus (HCV) chronic infection increases risk of drug-induced liver injury (DILI) in these patients. Data on MDR-TB patients with concurrent HCV chronic infection treated at the same time with second-line antitubercular drugs and new direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) are lacking. We evaluate if treating at the same time HCV infection and pulmonary MDR-TB is feasible and effective.Cases Presentation: In this study, we described two cases of patients with pulmonary MDR-TB and concurrent HCV chronic infection cured with DAAs at a Tertiary Infectious Diseases Hospital in Italy. During antitubercular treatment, both patients experienced a DILI before treating HCV infection. After DAAs liver enzymes normalized and HCV RNA was undetectable. Then antitubercular regimen was started according to the institutional protocol, drawn up following WHO MDR-TB guidelines. It was completed without further liver side effects and patients were declared cured from both HCV infection and MDR-TB.Conclusions: We suggest to consider treatment of chronic hepatitis C with DAAs as a useful intervention for reintroduction of second-line antitubercular agents in those patients who developed DILI, reducing the risk of treatment interruption when re-exposed to these drugs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Economic evaluation of the treatment of Acute Bacterial Skin and Skin Structure Infections (ABSSSIs) from the national payer perspective: introduction of a new treatment to the patient journey. A simulation of three European countries.
- Author
-
Marcellusi, A., Viti, R., Sciattella, P., Sarmati, L., Streinu-Cercel, A., Pana, A., Espin, J., Horcajada, J. P., Favato, G., Andretta, D., Soro, M., Andreoni, M., and Mennini, F. S.
- Subjects
ANTIBIOTICS ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COMPUTER simulation ,COST effectiveness ,DECISION making ,HOSPITAL care ,LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PEPTIDES ,RESEARCH ,SKIN diseases ,EVALUATION research ,ACUTE diseases ,STATISTICAL models - Abstract
Background: The aim of this study was to develop a spending predictor model to evaluate the direct costs associated with the management of ABSSSIs from the National health-care provider's perspective of Italy, Romania, and Spain. Methodology: A decision-analytic model was developed to evaluate the diagnostic and clinical pathways of hospitalized ABSSSI patients based on scientific guidelines and real-world data. A Standard of Care (SoC) scenario was compared with a dalbavancin scenario in which the patients could be discharged early. The epidemiological and cost parameters were extrapolated from national administrative databases (i.e., hospital information system). A probabilistic sensitivity analysis (PSA) and one-way sensitivity analysis (OWA) were performed. Results: Overall, the model estimated an average annual number of patients with ABSSSIs of approximately 50,000 in Italy, Spain, and Romania. On average, the introduction of dalbavancin reduced the length of stay by 3.3 days per ABSSSI patient. From an economic perspective, dalbavancin did not incur any additional cost from the National Healthcare perspective, and the results were consistent among the countries. The PSA and OWA demonstrated the robustness of these results. Conclusion: This model represents a useful tool for policymakers by providing information regarding the economic and organizational consequences of an early discharge approach in ABSSSI management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Management of hepatitis C virus infection in patients with chronic kidney disease: position statement of the joint committee of Italian association for the study of the liver (AISF), Italian society of internal medicine (SIMI), Italian society of infectious and tropical disease (SIMIT) and Italian society of nephrology (SIN)
- Author
-
Minutolo, Roberto, Aghemo, Alessio, Chirianni, Antonio, Fabrizi, Fabrizio, Gesualdo, Loreto, Giannini, Edoardo G., Maggi, Paolo, Montinaro, Vincenzo, Paoletti, Ernesto, Persico, Marcello, Perticone, Francesco, Petta, Salvatore, Puoti, Massimo, Raimondo, Giovanni, Rendina, Maria, Zignego, Anna Linda, on behalf of the Italian Society of Nephrology (SIN), the Italian Association for the Study of the Liver (AISF), the Italian Society of Infectious and Tropical Disease (SIMIT), and the Italian Society of Internal Medicine (SIMI)
- Subjects
TREATMENT of chronic kidney failure ,HEPATITIS C prevention ,HEPATITIS C transmission ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,CHRONIC kidney failure ,HEMODIALYSIS ,HEPATITIS C ,INTERNAL medicine ,KIDNEY transplantation ,LIVER ,MEDICAL practice ,PROTEINURIA ,SURVIVAL ,TROPICAL medicine ,DISEASE progression ,DISEASE complications ,PROGNOSIS ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is now considered a systemic disease due to the occurrence of extra-hepatic manifestations. Among these, the renal involvement is frequent. HCV infection, in fact, is strongly associated with proteinuria and chronic kidney disease (CKD) and negatively affects the prognosis of renal patients. In the last few years, availability of more specific and effective drugs against HCV has dramatically changed the clinical course of this disease. These drugs may provide further advantages in the CKD population as a whole by reducing progression of renal disease, mortality rate and by increasing the survival of graft in renal transplant recipients. The strict pathogenetic and prognostic link between HCV infection and CKD requires an ongoing relationship among the healthcare professionals involved in the treatment of both HCV infection and CKD. Therefore, Scientific Societies involved in the care of this high-risk population in Italy have organized a joint expert panel. The aim of the panel is to produce a position statement that can be used in daily clinical practice for the management of HCV infected patients across the whole spectrum of renal disease, from the conservative phase to renal replacement treatments (dialysis and transplantation). Sharing specific evidence-based expertise of different professional healthcare is the first step to obtain a common ground of knowledge on which to instate a model for multidisciplinary management of this high-risk population. Statements cover seven areas including epidemiology of CKD, HCV-induced glomerular damage, HCV-related renal risk, staging of liver disease in patients with CKD, prevention of transmission of HCV in hemodialysis units, treatment of HCV infection and management of HCV in kidney transplantation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.