15 results on '"Grigoletti L"'
Search Results
2. Which factors affect the costs of psychiatric residential care? Findings from the Italian PROGRES study
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Amaddeo, F., Grigoletti, L., de Girolamo, G., Picardi, A., and Santone, G.
- Published
- 2007
3. Costs of psychiatric services in five Italian areas. A multicentric study of a new funding system for community-based mental health services
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Grigoletti, L, Amaddeo, F., Perali, F., de Agostini, P., Grassi, A., Boldrini, M., Chiappelli, M., Percudani, M., Catapano, F., Fiorillo, A., Bacigalupi, M., Albanese, P., and Tansella, M.
- Published
- 2004
4. Mental well-being and its determinants among the oldest old
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Lara, E., Martín-María, N., Ådnanes, M., Amaddeo, F., Cresswell-Smith, J., Donisi, V., Forsman, A., Grigoletti, L., Halvorsen, T., Kalseth, J., Kaasbøll, J., Nyholm, L., Melby, L., Nordmyr, J., Rabbi, L., Wahlbeck, K., and Miret, M.
- Published
- 2018
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5. Mental health care financing in Italy: current situation and perspectives.
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Amaddeo F, Grigoletti L, and Montagni I
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- Humans, Italy, Mental Health legislation & jurisprudence, Mental Health Services legislation & jurisprudence, Healthcare Financing, Mental Health economics, Mental Health Services economics
- Abstract
Through a review of the studies conducted on the analysis of the costs of the Italian mental health provision of care, this study aimed at describing the current financing system for mental health care in Italy. From the deinstitutionalization to the present days, Italian mental health care financing has evolved in line with both national plans and the actual European directives. The description of the current situation of mental health care financing in Italy can be useful to inform service planning and resource allocation, and to offer a wider European perspective.
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- 2014
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6. Cancer mortality among psychiatric patients treated in a community-based system of care: a 25-year case register study.
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Perini G, Grigoletti L, Hanife B, Biggeri A, Tansella M, and Amaddeo F
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- Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Alcoholism mortality, Comorbidity, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, International Classification of Diseases, Italy epidemiology, Male, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Mental Disorders psychology, Middle Aged, Personality Disorders, Registries, Sex Distribution, Socioeconomic Factors, Time Factors, Cause of Death, Community Mental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Mental Disorders mortality, Neoplasms mortality, Neoplasms psychology
- Abstract
Purpose: Cancer mortality data allow assessing, at the same time, the risk of developing the disease and the quality of care provided to patients after the oncologic diagnosis. This study explores the risk of death caused by a single tumor site in a psychiatric population treated in a community-based psychiatric service., Methods: All patients with an ICD-10 psychiatric diagnosis, seeking care in 1982-2006 (25 years), were included. Data were drawn from the South Verona Psychiatric Case Register (PCR). Mortality and cause of death were ascertained using different procedures and sources. Standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) were used to compare the observed number of deaths with the expected number using as reference a population in the Veneto region., Results: Having been admitted to the hospital (SMR = 1.32), having a short interval from registration (1.52), having a diagnosis of alcoholism (2.03), and being a middle-aged male (1.83) were factors showing an increased risk of death from cancer. Increased SMRs were found for cancer of the oral cavity (22.93), lymphoma, leukemias, Hodgkin's lymphoma (8.01), and central nervous system (CNS) and cranial nerve tumors (4.75). The SMR decreased for stomach tumors (0.49). Patients with alcoholism (5.90 for larynx), affective disorders (20.00 for lymphomas), and personality disorders (28.00 for SNC) were found to be exposed to a high risk of cancer death in specific sites., Conclusions: Psychiatric patients showed different patterns of site-specific cancer mortality when compared with the general population. The 20-fold higher risk of dying from hematological neoplasms needs further investigation. Chronic use of phenothiazines could be involved in the relative protection from stomach and prostate cancer found in psychiatric patients.
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- 2014
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7. Burnout, compassion fatigue, and compassion satisfaction among staff in community-based mental health services.
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Rossi A, Cetrano G, Pertile R, Rabbi L, Donisi V, Grigoletti L, Curtolo C, Tansella M, Thornicroft G, and Amaddeo F
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- Adolescent, Adult, Burnout, Professional psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Mental Health, Middle Aged, Personal Satisfaction, Quality of Life psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Burnout, Professional diagnosis, Community Mental Health Services, Empathy, Health Personnel psychology, Job Satisfaction
- Abstract
Providing care to individuals with complex mental health needs can be stressful. However, little research has focused on the emotional, cognitive, and physical consequences of providing mental health care. The aim of this study is to assess burnout (BO), compassion fatigue (CF) and compassion satisfaction (CS) among staff at the four community-based mental health services (CMHS) of Verona, Italy. All staff were asked to complete anonymously the Professional Quality of Life Scale, the General Health Questionnaire, and a socio-demographic questionnaire. In total 260 staff participated (a response rate of 84%). Psychiatrists and social workers were the professionals with the highest levels of BO and CF. Workers with psychological distress reported both higher BO and CF scores, and lower levels of CS. A significant increase in the BO and CF scores was also detected for each extra year spent working in a CMHS. A higher level of CF was associated with female and having been experienced one negative life event in the previous year. These findings are useful for health managers and team leaders to identify factors affecting the professional quality of life of mental healthcare staff, and can provide a rationale for detecting staff at risk for developing negative work-related outcomes., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2012
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8. The difficult task of predicting the costs of community-based mental health care. A comprehensive case register study.
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Donisi V, Jones J, Pertile R, Salazzari D, Grigoletti L, Tansella M, and Amaddeo F
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Community Mental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Socioeconomic Factors, Young Adult, Community Mental Health Services economics, Health Care Costs statistics & numerical data, Mental Disorders economics, Mental Disorders therapy, Mental Health, Registries statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Previous studies have attempted to forecast the costs of mental health care, using clinical and individual variables; the inclusion of ecological measures could improve the knowledge of predictors of psychiatric service utilisation and costs to support clinical and strategic decision-making., Methods: Using a Psychiatric Case Register (PCR), all patients with an ICD-10 psychiatric diagnosis, who had at least one contact with community-based psychiatric services in the Verona Health District, Northern Italy, were included in the study (N = 4558). For each patient, one year's total cost of care was calculated by merging service contact data with unit cost estimates and clinical and socio-demographic variables were collected. A socio-economic status (SES) index was developed, as a proxy of deprivation, using census data. Multilevel multiple regression models, considering socio-demographic and clinical characteristics of patients as well as socioeconomic local characteristics, were estimated to predict costs., Results: The mean annual cost for all patients was 2,606.11 Euros; patients with an ongoing episode of care and with psychosis presented higher mean costs. Previous psychiatric history represented the most significant predictor of cost (36.99% R2 increase) and diagnosis was also a significant predictor but explained only 4.96% of cost variance. Psychiatric costs were uniform throughout the Verona Health District and SES characteristics alone contributed towards less than 1% of the cost variance., Conclusions: For all patients of community-based psychiatric services, a comprehensive model, including both patients' individual characteristics and socioeconomic local status, was able to predict 43% of variance in costs of care.
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- 2011
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9. DRGs and other patient-, service- and area-level factors influencing length of stay in acute psychiatric wards: the Veneto Region experience.
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Pertile R, Donisi V, Grigoletti L, Angelozzi A, Zamengo G, Zulian G, and Amaddeo F
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Diagnosis-Related Groups statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Length of Stay trends, Male, Mental Disorders classification, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Psychiatric Department, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Psychiatric Department, Hospital trends, Regression Analysis, Young Adult, Diagnosis-Related Groups economics, Length of Stay economics, Mental Disorders economics, Psychiatric Department, Hospital economics
- Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to identify services-related and area-based measures together with socio-demographic factors that could improve diagnosis-related groups in explaining length of stay variability in general hospital psychiatric units in Veneto Region (North East of Italy)., Methods: Data were collected from the regional hospital discharge records database. A hierarchical multiple regression model with only diagnosis-related groups as predictors of actual and ln-transformed length of stay was compared with a second model in which patient-, service- and area-level variables were included. Local health district was used as group-level in the hierarchical multiple regression analysis., Results: The only diagnosis explains 6.4% of actual length of stay total variance (14.8% for ln-transformation). In the second model length of stay resulted related also to gender, age, severity of hospitalization, patient's local health district, number of psychiatrists, psychologists, hospital attendants/nurses, social workers and educators in the general hospital psychiatric units, number of outpatients in each local health district and percentages of divorced and single people, with almost a 2% point increase on actual length of stay in explained variance (5% point increase for ln-transformation)., Conclusions: For the first time the hospital discharge card regional survey of all public acute inpatient psychiatric facilities in Veneto Region were used. The innovative aspect of this study was the attempt to investigate the relationship between length of stay and other indexes, characterizing not only the inpatient facilities, but also the resident population structure in each area. The information about factors that influence length of stay can be useful to inform service planning and resource allocation.
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- 2011
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10. Is the implementation of assertive community treatment in a low-income country feasible? The experience of Tbilisi, Georgia.
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Zavradashvili N, Donisi V, Grigoletti L, Pertile R, Gelashvili K, Eliashvili M, and Amaddeo F
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- Ambulatory Care economics, Continuity of Patient Care economics, Cost-Benefit Analysis statistics & numerical data, Feasibility Studies, Georgia (Republic) epidemiology, Health Care Costs statistics & numerical data, Health Care Reform economics, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Pilot Projects, Poverty economics, Community Mental Health Services economics, Community Mental Health Services methods, Mental Disorders economics, Mental Disorders therapy, Poverty statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: In Georgia, difficult socioeconomic conditions have resulted in a drastic decrease in government financing for the health sector. State mental hospitals continue to be the main solution for the mentally ill, due to the severe lack of community-based services, and mental health services are inadequate to meet the needs of patients., Methods: An experimental intervention of assertive community care was implemented with the aim to engage socially isolated patients who lacked contact with outpatient services and to answer their different social and psychological needs. The intervention lasted 10 months and consisted of outpatient visits, visits at home, meetings outside and telephone calls to the services' facilities; all services were provided by a multidisciplinary team. The intervention was conducted in a psychiatric dispensary in the district of Tbilisi, Georgia., Results: This pilot study showed the economic sustainability of community care and its effectiveness to facilitate continuity of care and to improve clinical and social outcomes., Conclusions: High-quality community care costs less than usual treatment and inpatient care and seems to be effective to improve clinical and social outcomes; for these reasons, policymakers should consider, in their future mental health reforms, allocating more resources to community-based care.
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- 2010
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11. A predictive model to allocate frequent service users of community-based mental health services to different packages of care.
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Grigoletti L, Amaddeo F, Grassi A, Boldrini M, Chiappelli M, Percudani M, Catapano F, Fiorillo A, Perris F, Bacigalupi M, Albanese P, Simonetti S, De Agostini P, and Tansella M
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- Female, Humans, Italy, Male, Models, Statistical, Community Mental Health Services supply & distribution
- Abstract
Aim: To develop predictive models to allocate patients into frequent and low service users groups within the Italian Community-based Mental Health Services (CMHSs). To allocate frequent users to different packages of care, identifying the costs of these packages., Methods: Socio-demographic and clinical data and GAF scores at baseline were collected for 1250 users attending five CMHSs. All psychiatric contacts made by these patients during six months were recorded. A logistic regression identified frequent service users predictive variables. Multinomial logistic regression identified variables able to predict the most appropriate package of care. A cost function was utilised to estimate costs., Results: Frequent service users were 49%, using nearly 90% of all contacts. The model classified correctly 80% of users in the frequent and low users groups. Three packages of care were identified: Basic Community Treatment (4,133 Euro per six months); Intensive Community Treatment (6,180 Euro) and Rehabilitative Community Treatment (11,984 Euro) for 83%, 6% and 11% of frequent service users respectively. The model was found to be accurate for 85% of users., Conclusion: It is possible to develop predictive models to identify frequent service users and to assign them to pre-defined packages of care, and to use these models to inform the funding of psychiatric care.
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- 2010
12. Diagnosing psychotic disorders: validity, reliability and applications of the Diagnostic Interview for Psychosis (DIP). Italian version.
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Rossi A, Morgan V, Amaddeo F, Sandri M, Grigoletti L, Maggioni F, Ferro A, Rigon E, Donisi V, Venturi VV, Goria F, Skre I, Tansella M, and Jablensky A
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- Humans, Italy, Language, Observer Variation, Reproducibility of Results, Affective Disorders, Psychotic diagnosis, Interviews as Topic
- Abstract
Aims: The Diagnostic Interview for Psychoses (DIP) is a comprehensive interview schedule for psychotic disorders, linked to the OPCRIT diagnostic algorithm, bridging the gap between fully structured, lay-administered schedules and semistructured, psychiatrist-administered interviews. Here we describe the validity, reliability and applications of the Italian version of the DIP., Methods: The interview was translated into Italian and its content validity tested by back translation. Sixty patients, drawn from among those who contacted the South-Verona Community Mental Health Service, were included in the study. Each patient was first assessed independently by two raters, one of whom conducted the interview, while the other assumed the role of observer. Subsequently (median: 89 days), 44 of these patients were re-interviewed by a third rater, who made an independent assessment. Diagnostic validity was assessed in 18 cases, interviewed with the DIP and using the SCAN as 'gold standard'., Results: The mean duration of the interview was 37 minutes for the inter-rater interviews and 39 minutes for the retest interviews. Good to excellent inter-rater reliability was demonstrated for both ICD-10 and DSM-IV diagnoses, while in the test-retest reliability pairwise agreement was high for half of the items. Diagnostic validity was good, with twelve out of the 18 DIP-OPCRIT diagnoses (67%) matching the SCAN diagnosis., Conclusions: Overall, the results support the reliability and validity of the Italian translation of the DIP. The Italian version will be useful both in routine practice to establish standard reference diagnoses of psychosis and in the research field, where it can be used by academic researchers in clinical trials and epidemiological studies.
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- 2010
13. [The cost and utilization of psychotherapy in community-based mental health services. A multicentre study in five Italian areas].
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Chiappelli M, Grigoletti L, Albanese P, Taras MA, Tulli P, and Grassi A
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- Catchment Area, Health, Health Care Costs, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Community Mental Health Services economics, Community Mental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Psychotherapy economics, Psychotherapy statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Aims: To investigate the prevalence of psychotherapy intervention in five Italian Centres for Mental Health. Analysing sociodemographic characteristics, geographical differences, frequencies of psychotherapy interventions, and the costs of these interventions., Methods: Five Italian Community-based Psychiatric Services collected data from 1250 patients during October 2002. Socio-demographic and clinical characteristics and GAF scores were collected at baseline. All psychiatric contacts during the following six months were recorded and categorised into 24 service contact categories. A comparison between patients who received or did not receive psychotherapy was made., Results: The socio-demographic characteristics of patients are very similar to those found in previous studies; there is a great difference in the number of psychotherapy treatments between the five areas. Psychotherapy patients use different services compared to the other patients, and their care cost less., Conclusions: This study provides a description of the provision of psychotherapy by Italian Mental Health Services. Further research is required into this topic.
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- 2007
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14. [Proposal for a new funding system for mental health departments. Results from an evaluative multicentre Italian study (I-psycost)].
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Grigoletti L, Amaddeo F, Grassi A, Boldrini M, Chiappelli M, Percudani M, Catapano F, Fiorillo A, Bartoli L, Bacigalupi M, Albanese P, Simonetti S, Perali F, De Agostini P, and Tansella M
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- Humans, Italy epidemiology, Mental Disorders economics, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Mental Disorders therapy, Capital Financing, Competitive Bidding, Mental Health Services economics
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Aims: To obtain a new, well-balanced mental health funding system, through the creation of (i) a list of psychiatric interventions provided by Italian Community-based Psychiatric Services (CPS), and associated costs; (ii) a new prospective funding system for patients with a high use of resources, based on packages of care., Methods: Five Italian Community-based Psychiatric Services collected data from 1250 patients during October 2002. Socio-demographical and clinical characteristics and GAF scores were collected at baseline. All psychiatric contacts during the following six months were registered and categorised into 24 service contact types. Using elasticity equation and contact characteristics, we estimate the costs of care. Cluster analysis techniques identified packages of care. Logistic regression defined predictive variables of high use patients. Multinomial Logistic Model assigned each patient to a package of care., Results: The sample's socio-demographic characteristics are similar, but variations exist between the different CPS. Patients were then divided into two groups, and the group with the highest use of resources was divided into three smaller groups, based on number and type of services provided., Conclusions: Our findings show how is possible to develop a cost predictive model to assign patients with a high use of resources to a group that can provide the right level of care. For these patients it might be possible to apply a prospective per-capita funding system based on packages of care.
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- 2006
15. [Costs of psychiatric residential care in Italy].
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Grigoletti L, Amaddeo F, de Girolamo G, and Picardi A
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- Health Care Costs, Humans, Italy, Mental Disorders economics, Mental Disorders rehabilitation, Mental Health Services economics, Residential Facilities economics, Residential Treatment economics
- Abstract
Objective: The aims of this study are: (1) to estimate patients' costs in Italian non hospital Residential Facilities (RF); (2) to analyse the relationship between the costs of care received by residents and patients' or facilities characteristics., Method: The PROGRES study included all Italian private and public RF (1370) with more than 4 beds. Of those, 265 were selected through stratified random sampling to be included in phase 2. Data were obtained through a schedule filled in by the facility manager. Additional information about costs related to the use of Community Psychiatric Service (CPS) by residents has also been collected. The cost components of residential accommodation include the costs of the RF, of the CPS, of general medical care, of the informal assistance provided by family or friends, and other non-medical costs., Results: The mean annual cost of stay in RFs was approximately 34,000 Euro, and it was related to the RF size and to staffing levels. Both RF and CPS are more expensive in the north of Italy, as compared to the center and the south. Costs were lower for older patients. CPS costs are lower when RF staffing levels are higher., Conclusions: In general, patients in RFs cost between 20,000 and 40,000 Euro per year; to this sum, additional 2,000-6,000 Euros per year should be added to include the costs of care provided outside the facility. Both RFs and CPS have different costs depending on the geographical area where the facilities are located, and staffing levels. Changes in CPS costs seem to be related to patients' characteristics.
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- 2004
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