606 results
Search Results
2. Research on the global trends of COVID-19 associated acute kidney injury: a bibliometric analysis.
- Author
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Zhao, Wen-jing, Tan, Rui-zhi, Gao, Jing, Su, Hongwei, Wang, Li, and Liu, Jian
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,ACUTE kidney failure ,ADULT respiratory distress syndrome ,CHRONIC kidney failure - Abstract
Critically ill COVID-19 patients may exhibit various clinical symptoms of renal dysfunction including severe Acute Kidney Injury (AKI). Currently, there is a lack of bibliometric analyses on COVID-19-related AKI. The aim of this study is to provide an overview of the current research status and hot topics regarding COVID-19 AKI. The literature was retrieved from the Web of Science Core Collection (WoSCC) database. Subsequently, we utilized Microsoft Excel, VOSviewer, Citespace, and Pajek software to revealed the current research status, emerging topics, and developmental trends pertaining to COVID-19 AKI. This study encompassed a total of 1507 studies on COVID-19 AKI. The United States, China, and Italy emerged as the leading three countries in terms of publication numbers, contributing 498 (33.05%), 229 (15.20%), and 140 (9.29%) studies, respectively. The three most active and influential institutions include Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan University and Harvard Medical School. Ronco C from Italy, holds the record for the highest number of publications, with a total of 15 papers authored. Cheng YC's work from China has garnered the highest number of citations, totaling 470 citations. The co-occurrence analysis of author keywords reveals that 'mortality', 'intensive care units', 'chronic kidney disease', 'nephrology', 'renal transplantation', 'acute respiratory distress syndrome', and 'risk factors' emerge as the primary areas of focus within the realm of COVID-19 AKI. In summary, this study analyzes the research trends in the field of COVID-19 AKI, providing a reference for further exploration and research on COVID-19 AKI mechanisms and treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The Digitisation of Italian Schools and the Pandemic Trigger: Actors and Policies in an Evolving Organisational Field.
- Author
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Carbone, Domenico and Calvi, Cristina
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,PANDEMICS ,ACTORS ,DIGITAL technology ,DISTANCE education ,EXPECTATION (Psychology) - Abstract
This article analyses the ongoing processes in the organisational field of Italian schools in light of the innovations induced by digital education policies. Specifically, it focuses on the relationship between actors and digital policies concerning the experience of distance learning (DL) that characterised the period of the COVID-19 pandemic. The paper reflects on DL outcomes regarding the three expectations that have often characterised the rhetoric associated with the promotion of digital educational policies, namely: the raising of learning levels, the development of digital competences and the increase in school inclusion. Through an analysis of a series of empirical studies exploring the point of view of the paper, this paper highlights what progress has been made in the digital schooling in Italy and what are still its main limitations. The results of the study show both the limits of the effectiveness of educational policies constructed with a top-down approach and highlight the potential for policy recalibration offered by a reorganisation of the decision-making process through the active involvement of all the actors in the educational system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Older adults' experiences of wellbeing during the COVID-19 pandemic: a comparative qualitative study in Italy and Switzerland.
- Author
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Dones, Iuna and Ciobanu, Ruxandra Oana
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,OLDER people ,WELL-being ,SOCIAL contact ,COGNITIVE restructuring therapy ,COVID-19 - Abstract
Background: Particularly at the beginning of the pandemic, adults aged 65 and older were portrayed as a homogeneously vulnerable population due to the elevated health risks associated with contracting the COVID-19 disease. This portrayal, combined with travel restrictions, closures of economic sectors, country-wide lockdowns, and suggestions by governmental authorities to limit social contact, had important implications for the wellbeing of older individuals. However, older adults are a heterogeneous population who relies on different resources to cope with stressful periods, like the COVID-19 pandemic. Simultaneously, countries also employed differentmeasures to contain the virus. Research thus far has focused on the short-termconsequences of the pandemic, but studies have yet to address its long-term consequences. Objectives: We explore older adults' lived experiences nearly 2 years after the pandemic onset. Moreover, we focus on the bordering countries of Switzerland and Italy, who employed contrasting containmentmeasures. This paper analyzes (1) Howthe COVID-19 pandemic impacted the experiences of wellbeing of older adults in these regions and (2) How older adults coped with the stressors brought about by the pandemic, in particular social distancing. Methods: The paper draws on 31 semi-structured interviews with 11 Swiss natives residing in Switzerland, 10 Italian migrants residing in Switzerland, and 10 Italian natives residing in Italy. Interviews were conducted from December 2021 to March 2022. Results: Coping mechanisms of the three groups related to acceptance, hobbies, cognitive reframing, telephone use, vaccine use and social distancing. However, results show heterogeneous experiences of wellbeing, with Swiss natives sharing more positive narratives than the other two groups. Moreover, Italian migrants and Italian natives expressed the long-term negative consequences of the pandemic on their experienced wellbeing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Workload, Job Satisfaction and Quality of Nursing Care in Italy: A Systematic Review of Native Language Articles.
- Author
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Serra, Nicola, Botti, Stefano, Guillari, Assunta, Simeone, Silvio, Latina, Roberto, Iacorossi, Laura, Torreggiani, Martina, Guberti, Monica, Cicolini, Giancarlo, Lupo, Roberto, Capuano, Angela, Pucciarelli, Gianluca, Gargiulo, Gianpaolo, Tomietto, Marco, and Rea, Teresa
- Subjects
MEDICAL quality control ,WORK environment ,NURSING ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,LANGUAGE & languages ,PUBLIC health ,HOSPITAL nursing staff ,EMPLOYEES' workload ,JOB satisfaction ,NURSING research ,INFORMATION resources ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Nursing research is rapidly increasing, yet contributions from numerous countries that may interest the international nursing community are impeded because many research articles are published in authors' native language and not in English. The objectives of this work were to systematically review papers published in Italian related to job satisfaction and the quality of nursing care, and to discuss their findings in light of the international literature. The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) method was used. The Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) and Indice della Letteretura Italiana di Scienze Infermieristiche (ILISI) databases were consulted for eligible studies published from January 2015 to November 2022. Two hundred sixteen papers were identified, 11 of which were selected for review: 8 on job satisfaction, two on workload issues, and 1 on quality of nursing care. The quality of included studies was assessed through the Effective Public Health Practice Project quality assessment tool (EPHPP). The results of our review were in line with those of international literature, and they can help to fill the knowledge gap on the quality of nursing performance in Italian care settings. In addition, the proposed method can provide further elements of discussion among literature providers and reviewers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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6. Migrants' Equal Access to Social Benefits under EU Law: Fragmentation and Exclusion during the Covid-19 Crisis in Italy.
- Author
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PASSALACQUA, VIRGINIA and GROSSIO, LORENZO
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COVID-19 pandemic ,EUROPEAN Union law ,IMMIGRANTS ,ITALIAN language - Abstract
This paper uses the case of Italy during the Covid-19 pandemic to critically assess the EU legal framework on third-country national migrants' equal access to social benefits. In Italy, migrants are structurally excluded from core social protections, a situation that during the pandemic led to a worsening of existing patterns of inequality; migrants have been more exposed than citizens to poverty, unemployment, and destitution. The first part of the paper looks for the EU legal root of this situation: it examines the EU legal framework in the migration field, showing that it is affected by fragmentation and inconsistencies. These problems become even more acute at the national level, where the Italian legislature mis-transposed the EU migration directives, thus affecting the use of discretionary clauses therein and severely curtailing migrants' equal treatment rights. Then, the second part of the paper asks whether adopting a mainstreaming approach to enhance equality could improve the situation of migrants. The paper argues that equality mainstreaming in the migration field shows good potential, while also encountering some structural limits. Therefore, it can hardly be considered a silver bullet against the problem of migrants' discrimination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Research on the global trends of COVID-19 associated acute kidney injury: a bibliometric analysis.
- Author
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Wen-jing Zhao, Rui-zhi Tan, Jing Gao, Hongwei Su, Li Wang, and Jian Liu
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,ACUTE kidney failure ,ADULT respiratory distress syndrome ,CHRONIC kidney failure - Abstract
Critically ill COVID-19 patients may exhibit various clinical symptoms of renal dysfunction including severe Acute Kidney Injury (AKI). Currently, there is a lack of bibliometric analyses on COVID-19- related AKI. The aim of this study is to provide an overview of the current research status and hot topics regarding COVID-19 AKI. The literature was retrieved from the Web of Science Core Collection (WoSCC) database. Subsequently, we utilized Microsoft Excel, VOSviewer, Citespace, and Pajek software to revealed the current research status, emerging topics, and developmental trends pertaining to COVID-19 AKI. This study encompassed a total of 1507 studies on COVID-19 AKI. The United States, China, and Italy emerged as the leading three countries in terms of publication numbers, contributing 498 (33.05%), 229 (15.20%), and 140 (9.29%) studies, respectively. The three most active and influential institutions include Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan University and Harvard Medical School. Ronco C from Italy, holds the record for the highest number of publications, with a total of 15 papers authored. Cheng YC’s work from China has garnered the highest number of citations, totaling 470 citations. The co-occurrence analysis of author keywords reveals that ‘mortality’, ‘intensive care units’, ‘chronic kidney disease’, ‘nephrology’, ‘renal transplantation’, ‘acute respiratory distress syndrome’, and ‘risk factors’ emerge as the primary areas of focus within the realm of COVID-19 AKI. In summary, this study analyzes the research trends in the field of COVID-19 AKI, providing a reference for further exploration and research on COVID-19 AKI mechanisms and treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. How does decision-making change during challenging times?
- Author
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Cicerale, Alessandro, Blanzieri, Enrico, and Sacco, Katiuscia
- Subjects
DECISION making ,PROSPECT theory ,EXPECTED utility ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COGNITIVE bias - Abstract
Prospect Theory, proposed and developed by Kahneman and Tversky, demonstrated that people do not make rational decisions based on expected utility, but are instead biased by specific cognitive tendencies leading to neglect, under- or over- consider information, depending on the context of presentation. In this vein, the present paper focuses on whether and how individual decision-making attitudes are prone to change in the presence of globally challenging events. We ran three partial replications of the Kahneman and Tversky (1979) paper, focusing on a set of eight prospects, after a terror attack (Paris, November 2015, 134 subjects) and during the Covid-19 pandemic, both during the first lockdown in Italy (Spring 2020, 176 subjects) and after the first reopening (140 subjects). The results confirm patterns of choice characterizing uncertain times, as shown by previous literature. In particular, we note significant increase of risk aversion, both in the gain and in the loss domains, that consistently emerged in the three replications. Given the nature of our sample, and the heterogeneity between the three periods investigated, we suggest that the phenomenon we present can be explained stress-related effects on decision making rather than by other economic effects, such as the income effect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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9. "People are going mad": A disjunctive comparison of rituals of grocery shopping at the beginning of Covid-19 (March-June 2020).
- Author
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BINENTI, Silvia
- Subjects
GROCERY shopping ,CONSUMER behavior ,SOCIAL comparison ,PREPAREDNESS ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,MATERIAL culture - Abstract
At the very beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic, the act of loading shopping carts more than usual materialized as a sensible choice for most shoppers. Yet, stockpiling was constructed in parallel to the social pathologizing of so-called panic buying. Panic buyers emerged as supermarket "loose cannons" who seemed to create an "indecorous" spectacle out of what is usually considered an unremarkable act of everyday life. In this context, through the disjunctive comparison of experiences of grocery shopping in Italy and England, this paper looks at material cultures of preparedness and moral cosmologies of everyday consumption as they acquired social salience during the first few months of the Covid-19 pandemic (from March to June 2020). The rupture of everydayness allowed to appreciate the ritualistic aspects of grocery shopping and highlight their role in the temporal, social and moral ordering of everyday life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Correction of Italian under-reporting in the first COVID-19 wave via age-specific deconvolution of hospital admissions.
- Author
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Milanesi, Simone and De Nicolao, Giuseppe
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,EPIDEMIOLOGICAL models ,INVERSE problems ,TIME series analysis ,DECONVOLUTION (Mathematics) - Abstract
When the COVID-19 pandemic first emerged in early 2020, healthcare and bureaucratic systems worldwide were caught off guard and largely unprepared to deal with the scale and severity of the outbreak. In Italy, this led to a severe underreporting of infections during the first wave of the spread. The lack of accurate data is critical as it hampers the retrospective assessment of nonpharmacological interventions, the comparison with the following waves, and the estimation and validation of epidemiological models. In particular, during the first wave, reported cases of new infections were strikingly low if compared with their effects in terms of deaths, hospitalizations and intensive care admissions. In this paper, we observe that the hospital admissions during the second wave were very well explained by the convolution of the reported daily infections with an exponential kernel. By formulating the estimation of the actual infections during the first wave as an inverse problem, its solution by a regularization approach is proposed and validated. In this way, it was possible to compute corrected time series of daily infections for each age class. The new estimates are consistent with the serological survey published in June 2020 by the National Institute of Statistics (ISTAT) and can be used to speculate on the total number of infections occurring in Italy during 2020, which appears to be about double the number officially recorded. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Outcomes and Observations of On-line CME Activities during the Pandemic.
- Author
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Fiuzzi, Michela
- Subjects
CAREER development ,CONTINUING medical education ,EDUCATIONAL standards ,DIGITAL technology ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic created an environment where the majority of continuing medical education (CME) and continuing professional development (CPD) activities needed to be delivered digitally. Producing digital materials for 16 separate learning activities (four learning journeys for each of four topic areas) in 2021 provided challenges and raised points of interest and discussion for a small, Italy-based provider of CME and CPD. This study presents outcome metrics from four live, interactive webinars. A variety of promotional efforts, including the strategic use of social media, generated interest and participation; feedback from the European Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education standard questionnaire to participants provided rates of satisfaction; subject knowledge and self-reported competence was measured by responses to pre- and post-event and follow-up (after 3 months) questionnaires. Post-event analysis of processes prompted introspection on the learning journey outcomes and methods of analysis. This paper discusses these observations, including potential innovations for future activities (e.g. reconfiguring the e-learning platform to capture time spent on learning activities), and also discusses issues in learner behaviour that impact CME provision and evaluation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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12. A New Tailored Approach to Calculate the Optimal Number of Outdoor Air Changes in School Building HVAC Systems in the Post-COVID-19 Era.
- Author
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D'Agostino, Diana, Di Mascolo, Martina, Minelli, Federico, and Minichiello, Francesco
- Subjects
NATURAL ventilation ,COVID-19 pandemic ,GREENHOUSE gases ,INDUSTRIALIZED building ,AIRBORNE infection ,COVID-19 ,COMMERCIAL buildings ,SCHOOL buildings - Abstract
Air conditioning systems can play a positive or negative role in the spread of COVID-19 infection. The importance of sufficient outdoor air changes in buildings was highlighted by the World Health Organization, therefore these should be guaranteed by mechanical ventilation systems or adequate air conditioning systems. The proposed case study concerns the optimal number of outdoor air changes to limit COVID-19 contagion for a school building in Central Italy. The Wells–Riley model is used to assess the risk of airborne infection, while energy consumption is calculated by a dynamic energy simulation software. The scope of the paper offers an innovative method to define the optimal ventilation strategy for the building's HVAC system design to reduce the risk of infection with limited increases in energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions. Results show that the desirable approach is the one in which the same low value of contagion risk is set in all rooms. This new approach results in significant energy savings, compared to the most common ones (setting the same high outdoor air rates for all rooms) to counteract the risk of infection. Finally, the zero-emission building target is verified by introducing a suitable photovoltaic system to offset pollutant emissions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Cultural dynamics influencing decision-making during the COVID-19 pandemic: the Italian case.
- Author
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Costa, Sara and Carrus, Giuseppe
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors ,CULTURAL identity ,DECISION making ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has brought about significant changes to the life of most individuals, worldwide. This study explores the cultural factors influencing decision-making during the pandemic, and is part of the CORNER Project, funded by the Research Council of Norway, aimed at understanding institutional response in the early phases of the Covid-19 emergency in Norway, Sweden, and Italy. Semi-structured interviews with key political-administrative leaders in Italy (N = 35) were conducted and content-analyzed, allowing the identification of the underlying cultural dynamics that played a role in these decisions. Thematic analysis was used to assess the influence of cultural factors on the crisis management and early reaction of institutions and citizens to the spread of Covid. In line with previous studies, and as expected, the individualism vs. collectivism dimension can explain differential health outcomes during the outbreak. In this paper we argue that individualism-collectivism cultural values can also play a pivotal role in public compliance with Covid-19 restrictions, and psychological responses during the pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The acceleration of digital communications in the durable goods industry. A study on white goods firms after COVID-19.
- Author
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Hu, Lala and Olivieri, Mirko
- Subjects
DIGITAL communications ,DURABLE consumer goods ,COMMUNICATION in marketing ,COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,INDUSTRIAL marketing - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to investigate how business-to-business (B2B) companies operating in durable goods use digital communications after the COVID-19 outbreak. In particular, this paper focuses on the objectives of these digital communication tools for the marketing strategies of B2B white goods firms. Design/methodology/approach: As the research objective is explorative, the authors conducted a qualitative analysis by collecting 13 semi-structured interviews with B2B marketing professionals working for white goods firms in Italy. Primary data was triangulated with secondary data about the white goods industry, such as sector reports. Findings: The findings of this paper show an acceleration in the adoption of digital communication tools among B2B firms after COVID-19. The authors also discuss the effects in the use of such tools both in the short and long term. Originality/value: This paper attempts to contribute to the B2B marketing literature by providing an original analysis of the consequences of the COVID-19 outbreak focusing on the use of digital communication tools among white goods firms. It also provides managerial implications for firms operating in B2B. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Immigrant Women's Protagonism: Exercising Leadership Roles in Ethnic Churches at the Time of the Pandemic in Italy.
- Author
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Molli, Samuele Davide
- Subjects
WOMEN immigrants ,LEADERSHIP in women ,PANDEMICS ,ACTIVISM ,HEALTH equity ,RELIGIOUS minorities ,GENDER inequality - Abstract
This paper discusses the protagonism expressed by immigrant women in religion via a series of leadership roles and expands on this theme by considering the pandemic as an emblematic period in which such female activism revealed itself. While the literature gives important details on gender inequalities generated by COVID-19, this article brings to attention agency, resilience and innovation. The case of catholic ethnic churches in Italy, a country particularly hit by the implications of COVID-19, is the empirical field. This paper uses qualitative data obtained through prolonged fieldwork (2018–2022), allowing to discuss the role of ethnic churches before and after the pandemic. The empowerment processes of women in religion and their leading role in terms of welfare provision and activism are detailed, concluding by considering the implications of these. While public institutions were in trouble, religious minorities, and notably their female members, acted to ensure the survival of non-Italian citizens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The Association between the Health Crisis and Economic Evolutions at Country Level. A comparative Analysis.
- Author
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TUDORACHE, Adrian Tudor
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,FINANCIAL crises ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COVID-19 ,SECONDARY analysis ,EUROZONE - Abstract
The present paper aims to identify how economic evolutions related to health conditions during the Covid-19 pandemic. The research includes an analysis on the evolutions of the health and economic conditions during the Covid-19 health crisis and also on they way they are linked to each other. The investigation is conducted at country level and is exemplified on two European countries, namely Italy and Greece. The methodology employed was based on three types of analyses: descriptive, correlation and comparative analyses that used secondary data from international organizations. Results illustrate that the economic life was affected by the Covid-19 conditions (Covid-19 incidence and the associated restrictions), with inflation being the most affected in both countries. At the same time, international trade was affected differently in the two countries, with Italy being negatively and more intensively affected than Greece, for which the association was positive and rather weak. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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17. A Low-Cost Early Warning Method for Infectious Diseases with Asymptomatic Carriers.
- Author
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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
18. Allocation of Healthcare Resources During Public Health Emergencies Should Not Perpetuate Ageism.
- Author
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Lupo, Czeazar Ianne E. and Bayod, Rogelio P.
- Subjects
AGEISM ,RESOURCE allocation ,COVID-19 ,AGE groups ,COVID-19 pandemic ,HELP-seeking behavior ,PUBLIC health ,CIVIL defense - Abstract
Making ethical decisions in the context of a pandemic emergency due to the limited availability of healthcare resources is a pervasive problem that health organizations are trying to counter. As the coronavirus disease emerged worldwide, some countries were experiencing unanticipated challenges regarding resource allocation. While some were consistent with following the ethical guidelines in allocating these scarce resources, others acknowledged a different approach in their respective jurisdictions. A committee in Italy recognized the need to set an age limit for ICU admissions after seeking ethical counsel because the demand for critical care surprisingly exceeded supply. On the other hand, Philippine healthcare systems responded in a way that is not the same. They allocate resources reasonably and seek help from the Philippine government to avoid the scarcity dilemma. This paper will explore how scarce medical resources should be administered by healthcare systems without leaving the elderly behind. Afterward, this gives a possible approach to be taken in dealing with pandemics and other emergencies in the future. This paper will argue that in public health emergencies, age is an irrelevant characteristic when determining healthcare resource allocation amid the COVID-19 pandemic, and decisions should not be based on how scarce resources are. This paper supports an egalitarian view, specifically John Rawls' theory of justice, to ease the deep-rooted ageism in societies. The author believed that overlooking the most vulnerable populations during the pandemic must not be perpetuated despite the lack of preparedness for this sudden public health emergency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
19. Pediatric Gastroenterology and Hepatology in Italy before and after the COVID-19: Lessons learned and management changes by SIGENP.
- Author
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Dipasquale, Valeria, Deganello Saccomani, Marco, Di Giorgio, Angelo, Oliva, Salvatore, Salvatore, Silvia, Strisciuglio, Caterina, Tambucci, Renato, Lionetti, Paolo, and Romano, Claudio
- Subjects
INFLAMMATORY bowel disease diagnosis ,INFLAMMATORY bowel disease treatment ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PEDIATRICS ,HEPATITIS ,GASTROINTESTINAL diseases ,DIGESTIVE system endoscopic surgery ,LIVER diseases ,COVID-19 pandemic ,TELEMEDICINE - Abstract
Around the world, the 2019 Coronavirus disease (COVID-19), caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), has raised serious public health problems and major medical challenges. The Italian Society of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition (SIGENP) published several papers on the impact of COVID-19 on the current management, diagnosis, and treatment of acute and chronic gastrointestinal, hepatic, immune-mediated, and functional disorders. The present article summarizes the most relevant SIGENP reports and consensus during and after the peak of the COVID-19 outbreak, including the diagnosis and treatment of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), indications and timing of digestive endoscopy, and insights into the novel hepatitis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. SEARCHING FOR A FAIR ALLOCATION OF SCARCE MEDICAL RESOURCES UNDER EU LAW: A NEED FOR BALANCE FOR THE ELDERLY?
- Author
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KAYA, Gözde
- Subjects
OLDER people ,EUROPEAN Union law ,AGE ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Copyright of Ankara Review of European Studies (ARES) / Ankara Avrupa Çalışmaları Dergisi (AAÇD) is the property of Ankara University European Union Research Centre and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. PROCESI JEZIKOVNEGA SEPARATIZMA PRI ČEZMEJNIH JEZIKOVNIH MANJŠINAH: PREVZEMANJE, PRILAGAJANJE IN PREVAJANJE COVIDNE TERMINOLOGIJE MED SLOVENCI IN SLOVENKAMI V ITALIJI.
- Author
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GRGIČ, Matejka and POPIČ, Damjan
- Subjects
VARIATION in language ,LINGUISTIC minorities ,LANGUAGE contact ,LOANWORDS ,COVID-19 pandemic ,LINGUISTIC rights ,UNITED States presidential election, 2020 - Abstract
Copyright of Annals for Istrian & Mediterranean Studies / Annales: Series Historia et Sociologia is the property of Historical Society of Southern Primorska of Koper and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Lessons learned from a case study on teaching the socioscientific issue of ethanol, used as an ingredient of sanitizers, to promote students' learning of and about chemistry during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
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Ambrogi, Paola and Eilks, Ingo
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,HAND sanitizers ,ONLINE education ,ETHANOL ,LEARNING ,AUTHENTIC learning - Abstract
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the unexpected lockdown of schools brought many challenges to redesigning the teaching and learning of chemistry at the secondary schooling level. The demand for online teaching under COVID-19 conditions was, however, also an opportunity to reflect on introducing new content, pedagogies, and media. This paper reflects on the implementation of a chemistry lesson plan focusing on the socio-scientific issue of ethanol used for hand sanitizers in Italy. Ethanol is possibly the most common ingredient of hand sanitizer lotions and provides an authentic context for the learning of and about chemistry. The objective was to promote students' awareness of the deep interconnections between science, society, ethics, and the environment through a socio-scientific issues-based approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. 'And what did you do about my emotions during Covid‐19?' Making sense of negative emotions at work through institutional logics and Critical Systems Heuristics.
- Author
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Tavella, Elena
- Subjects
HOSPITAL medical staff ,PROBLEM solving ,CONVERSATION ,SYSTEMS theory ,DIARY (Literary form) ,PSYCHOLOGY of nurses ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,EMOTIONS ,LOGIC ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CORPORATE culture ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
The literature on Covid‐19 has demonstrated that frontline workers use different coping strategies and engage in sense‐making to address negative emotions. However, we know little about the underlying process of sense‐making. Thus, this paper uses institutional logics to investigate how sense‐making of negative emotions is enabled and constrained. This analysis draws on a diary written by a nurse at an Italian hospital, which represents an account of the emotions experienced by medical staff. The analysis identifies a set of enablers and disablers of sense‐making, as well as, the patterns that alleviate and intensify frontline workers' emotions. Based on these findings and evidence of the Covid‐task force at Papa Giovanni XXIII hospital in Bergamo, Italy, this paper illustrates Critical Systems Heuristics as a means to address the disablers of sense‐making through participatory conversations that consider different institutional logics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Improving the mental health care process in response to Covid-19 pandemic: The case of a penitentiary mental health division.
- Author
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Nuzzi, Angela, Latorre, Valeria, Semisa, Domenico, and Scozzi, Barbara
- Subjects
MENTAL health services ,COVID-19 pandemic ,HEALTH facilities ,MENTAL health ,PRISONS - Abstract
Covid-19 outbreak led all organizations to reorganize their processes to prevent infection and contagion risk. All healthcare facilities, included penitentiary mental health services, had to redesign their processes to safely deliver care services. In this paper, the case of a Penitentiary Mental Health Division located in southern Italy is presented. Soft System Methodology and Business process management principles and techniques are adopted to analyse and redesign the detainees' mental health care process. The process, characterized by direct, close and prolonged contact with patients, exposes detainees and healthcare staff to a high Covid-19 infection risk. Through document analysis, interviews with the actors involved in the process and direct observation, the process's inefficiencies and criticalities are identified. The process is redesigned to make it compliant with Covid-19 prevention provisions and national penitentiary regulations and address the other criticalities. The proposed methodological approach–which innovatively combines Soft System Methodology and Business Process Management–constitutes a human-centered process-based redesign approach that can be used both in healthcare and other organizational settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Migration propensity of peripheral youth: insights from Italy.
- Author
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Sonzogno, Giulia Valeria, Urso, Giulia, and Faggian, Alessandra
- Subjects
YOUNG adults ,SOCIAL impact ,COVID-19 pandemic ,ECONOMIC impact - Abstract
The social and economic consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic are at risk of exacerbating the preexisting intergenerational and interregional inequalities between and within countries, such as those between core and peripheral areas. In particular, in the latter, especially in Italy, the lack of opportunities and access to essential services may affect the current and new generations to come, while also compromising the development of the country as a whole. Against this backdrop, understanding young people's aspirations and needs is vital to produce evidence-based knowledge to inform policies promoting opportunities to stay in or return to these territories. This paper investigates young people's migration propensity, uncovering the individual characteristics and the factors explaining their propensity to leave their place or to stay and work there. Data come from a nationwide survey carried out on a representative sample of about 950 young people residing in peripheral areas of Italy, via a questionnaire designed and administered as part of the research-action project 'Giovani Dentro'. The study provides new and timely information about the difficulties, desires and plans of young people who choose to stay in or return to these territories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Deciding the Criteria Is Not Enough: Moral Issues to Consider for a Fair Allocation of Scarce ICU Resources.
- Author
-
Battisti, Davide and Picozzi, Mario
- Subjects
PASSIVE euthanasia ,MEDICAL personnel ,DISTRIBUTIVE justice ,COVID-19 pandemic ,RESOURCE allocation ,ETHICS - Abstract
During the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy, practitioners had to make tragic decisions regarding the allocation of scarce resources in the ICU. The Italian debate has paid a lot of attention to identifying the specific regulatory criteria for the allocation of resources in the ICU; in this paper, however, we argue that deciding such criteria is not enough for the implementation of fair and transparent allocative decisions. In this respect, we discuss three ethical issues: (a) in the Italian context, the treating physician, rather than a separate committee, was generally the one responsible for the allocation decision; (b) although many allocative guidelines have supported moral equivalence between withholding and withdrawing treatments, some health professionals have continued to consider it a morally problematic aspect; and (c) the health workers who have had to make the aforementioned decisions or even only worked in ICU during the pandemic often experienced moral distress. We conclude by arguing that, even if these problems are not directly related to the above-mentioned issues of distributive justice, they can nevertheless directly affect the quality and ethics of the implementation of allocative criteria, regardless of those chosen. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Shedding light on the impact of financial literacy for corporate social responsibility during the COVID-19 crisis: managerial and financial perspectives.
- Author
-
Stella, Gian Paolo, Cervellati, Enrico Maria, Magni, Domitilla, Cillo, Valentina, and Papa, Armando
- Subjects
SOCIAL responsibility of business ,FINANCIAL literacy ,COVID-19 pandemic ,FINANCIAL crises ,STAKEHOLDER theory - Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this paper is to help management scholars and executives learn from the COVID-19 global crisis by analyzing if and how the level of financial literacy affected stakeholders' sensitivity to corporate social responsibility (CSR) issues during the pandemic, as well as identifying whether financial literacy is an important variable to account for in the postpandemic period. The authors test the relationship between objective (measurable) and subjective (self-assessed) financial literacy, as well as financial happiness (i.e. satisfaction with one's current financial situation) with CSR during the pandemic. High levels of financial literacy cause individuals to reward companies that implement CSR strategies and processes. Design/methodology/approach: The authors designed an online survey and obtained data on objective and subjective financial literacy, financial happiness and COVID-19 infections, as well as on the demographic and socioeconomic characteristics of a representative sample of 1,334 Italian respondents. From a methodological point of view, the authors perform a factor analysis on the CSR-related questions to extract the principal components (PCs) that were used as dependent variables in the regression models to analyze the effects of explanatory variables (financial literacy, financial happiness and COVID-19 infections) and consider the control variables (demographic and socioeconomic characteristics). The authors follow a theoretical approach merging stakeholder theory with CSR. Findings: Respondents with a high level of financial literacy and financial happiness are highly sensitive to all CSR components (ethical, philanthropic, economic and legal social responsibilities). Being infected by COVID-19 increased participants' sensitivity to ethical and philanthropic social responsibility (SR), but not to economic and legal SR. The more educated and employed respondents were, the more sensitive they were to CSR, especially compared to their less educated and unemployed counterparts. Research limitations/implications: While the sample used is large and representative of the Italian population, Italy is an interesting and useful case to analyze, given that it was the first Western country to be severely hit by COVID-19; since the paper only refers to a specific country scenario, the results cannot be generalized to other countries. A cross-country comparison relating financial literacy and financial happiness to CSR during the COVID-19 pandemic period would be desirable. The research study has theoretical implications for management scholars since the authors show that, during the pandemic period, financial education and financial happiness are relevant in explaining stakeholders' greater sensitivity to CSR issues. The findings may thus help scholars to learn from the COVID-19 period, with the aim of further developing and enhancing stakeholders' theory. Practical implications: The research also has practical implications, both for corporate executives and for policymakers, helping them to learn from the COVID-19 global crisis concerning the role of financial literacy and financial happiness on CSR sensitivity and, consequently, how they may consider these important variables in the postpandemic era. On the one hand, executives may improve stakeholders' segmentation and eventually modify CSR policies, considering the higher sensitivity of their stakeholders' due to a higher degree of financial literacy. On the other hand, the findings suggest that policymakers should have a stronger role in supporting employment and education in general and in promoting programs to improve financial literacy to increase stakeholders' sensitivity to CSR, thus further stimulating the inclusion of CSR factors in companies' strategies. Increasing stakeholders' sensitivity to CSR will, in turn, increase the propensity of companies to include SR in their strategies. Thus, increasing financial literacy will have tangible positive effects of increasing CSR. Given the greater role played by companies during the COVID-19 period with respect to societal risk, the findings seem particularly useful. Originality/value: To the best of the authors' knowledge, this study represents the first that links financial literacy and financial happiness with CSR during the COVID-19 crisis. The large and representative dataset, as well as the use of specific variables related to financial literacy, financial happiness and COVID-19 infections in the CSR assessment model, makes our analysis original, robust and significant by contributing to the CSR literature and to the financial literacy literature from a methodological point of view, as well as by informing corporate executives and policymakers about the role of financial literacy with regard to CSR during the pandemic, which may help them in learning how to improve their decisions and actions in the postpandemic era. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Has the seasonal workers directive missed its target? Evidence from Italy during the pandemic.
- Author
-
Passalacqua, Virginia
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,PERSONALLY identifiable information ,PANDEMICS ,LABOR market ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
In 2014, the European Union adopted the Seasonal Workers Directive to achieve a twofold aim: meeting employers' demand for flexible and cheap labour and enhancing protection for third-country national (TCN) workers. Especially Article 23, the equal treatment provision, triggered a cautious optimism among scholars and trade unions, which looked at the Directive as a source of increased protection for seasonal workers. However, trade unions also pointed out the limited reach of the Directive, criticising its lack of commitment and ambition. Over the years, and especially during the Covid pandemic, it became clear that the Seasonal Workers Directive did not represent a game-changer for TCN seasonal workers, whose increased protections remained true only on paper. This contribution draws on the case of Italy during the pandemic to understand the reasons for the Directive's limited impact. The article critically examines the different political tensions underpinning the adoption of the Directive, to better understand why the Directive is not applied in practice and how it impacts the labour market and migrants' social conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. NAVIGATING THE "MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS" IN ADOLESCENTS IN THE AFTERMATH OF COVID-19 PANDEMIC: EXPERIENCE AND INSIGHTS FROM FRONTLINE PSYCHIATRIC SERVICE.
- Author
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Mucci, Federico, Bouanani, Siham, Cerù, Angelo, Mauro, Amelia, and Diolaiuti, Francesca
- Subjects
MENTAL health services ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MENTAL health ,TEENAGERS ,MEDICAL care ,PSYCHIATRIC nursing - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic had a great impact on adolescent mental health, with a dramatic rise in psychiatric emergencies that has challenged healthcare systems worldwide. This paper aims at focusing on reporting the authors' experience and their data collected on adolescent emergencies in 2022 in Tuscan, within the context of the "Azienda USL Toscana Nord Ovest", a large department covering about a third of Tuscany's Regional Health Service, in central Italy. The collected findings will be shortly presented and commented on, while providing insights concerning the importance of adapting healthcare systems to adequately respond to this growing crisis and the need for broader strategies to support adolescent mental health in these challenging times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Covid-19 on stock market performance: evidence from Italy.
- Author
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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
31. Is the Euro up for Grabs? Evidence from a Survey Experiment.
- Author
-
Baccaro, Lucio, Bremer, Björn, and Neimanns, Erik
- Subjects
EURO ,MONETARY unions ,COVID-19 pandemic ,SNAP elections ,EUROZONE ,AUSTERITY - Abstract
Copyright of Max-Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung Discussion Papers is the property of Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
32. One Year of COVID-19: Lessons Learned in a Hand Trauma Center.
- Author
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Covino, Marcello, Fulchignoni, Camillo, Pietramala, Silvia, Barbaliscia, Marco, Franceschi, Francesco, Maccauro, Giulio, Merendi, Gianfranco, and Rocchi, Lorenzo
- Subjects
TRAUMA centers ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,GESTURE ,TRAUMA surgery ,HOSPITAL emergency services - Abstract
2020 will be remembered worldwide as the year of COVID-19 outbreak. The onset of this pandemic abruptly changed everybody's life and, in a particular manner, doctors' lives. Our hand surgery department became rapidly one of the first COVID-19-specialized wards in Italy, impacting considerably the authors' routines and activities. In this paper, the authors focus on how the demographics of patients with hand trauma changed and how they had to modify their activity. The authors retrospectively took into consideration all patients reaching their emergency department (ED) with hand trauma between 9 March 2020 (the day of the beginning of the first lockdown in Italy) and 8 March 2021 and compared them to those who reached the ED in the three previous years. Authors have analyzed the number of patients, their gender and age, the severity of their trauma, where the trauma occurred, the type of lesion, the percentage of patients who underwent surgery, and the percentage of patients who had an emergency admission. In the last year, the number of patients reaching the ED for a hand trauma has been reduced by two thirds (975 patients during the past year), the mean age of those patients has slightly increased, the severity of cases has increased, places of trauma and type of lesions have changed, and, lastly, the percentage of patients needing surgery who were admitted immediately has increased. This paper shows how the type of patients reaching the ED changed and discusses how surgeons evolved and modified their habits in treating those patients during the first lockdown and the year that followed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. THE ROLE OF KNOWLEDGE STRUCTURES IN RECONFIGURING RURAL TOURISM IN RESPONSE TO THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC: AN EXPLORATORY STUDY OF RURAL TOURISM IN ITALY AND KAZAKHSTAN.
- Author
-
GRANDI, Silvia, MACDONALD, Sandy, and TANKIBAYEVA, Aliya
- Subjects
RURAL tourism ,PANDEMICS ,COVID-19 pandemic ,RESOURCE mobilization ,HISTORICAL literacy ,RURAL development - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to analyze changes in the notion and role of rural tourism provoked by the COVID-19 pandemic. The paper examines how rural tourism in the pandemic year 2020 has accommodated human needs for well-being: which touristic resources have been mobilized and what knowledge structures have contributed to mobilization of touristic resources. The authors use a qualitative multimethod approach to develop insights about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on changing roles played by rural tourism in Italy and Kazakhstan. The theoretical novelty of the research is that it conceptualizes tourism resource mobilization strategies as a result of the historical and emerging knowledge structures. It was found that while both geographical and ethno-cultural resources form the basis for rural tourism development, knowledge structures play a critical role in setting both the interpretative and institutional frames defining rural tourism forms and directions of development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Recent scenarios in Italy on fresh-cut products in the Covid-19 context.
- Author
-
Zarbà, Carla, Chinnici, Gaetano, Pecorino, Biagio, Pappalardo, Gioacchino, and D'Amico, Mario
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,LEGISLATION ,DATA analysis - Abstract
In recent years, the fresh-cut products segment has shown a growing trend in Italy even in the current complex socio-economic phase determined largely by the Covid 19 pandemic. The paper proposes an evolutionary path with the analysis of data produced by statistical sources, effective for cognitive purposes. Data mainly refer to the large product group of "salads" that represent the prevailing market share of the fresh-cut products segment. The vitality emerged has suggested to focus on some of the quality aspects orientated both on the part of firms, in order to promote competitive capacity, and on the part of consumers because of the need to respond to requests for food safety. In relation to this aspect, the paper proposes theoretical consideration, relevant for practical and factual purposes, on whether food safety is really one of the factors closely linked to determining quality. This is to identify the role and the importance attributed respectively to quality, as regards the ability to satisfy expressed or implicit needs, and to food safety, as an absence of risks that could endanger human health. The resulting difference in role and function raised the question of whether food quality and safety should be considered universally combined in the reference food. Finally, the paper, in the general regulatory framework, inherent to the agro-food sector of the European Union and of the Italian legislative authorities, has sought to identify the provisions that directly and/or indirectly influence the improvement and innovation of fresh-cut products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A bivariate prediction approach for adapting the health care system response to the spread of COVID-19.
- Author
-
Berta, Paolo, Paruolo, Paolo, Verzillo, Stefano, and Lovaglio, Pietro Giorgio
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,FORECASTING ,MEDICAL care ,COVID-19 pandemic ,INTENSIVE care units - Abstract
The spread of COVID-19 implied a large and fast increase of demand for intensive care services. To face this increase in demand, health care systems need to adapt their response by increasing hospital beds, intensive care unit (ICU) capacity and by (re-)deploying doctors and other personnel. This paper proposes a forecast approach based on the Vector Error Correction model for the daily counts of hospitalized patients with symptoms and of patients in ICU, using publicly available data on the current COVID-19 outbreak in Italy, Switzerland and Spain. The level of analysis is the local government managing the health care system response, which corresponds to regions for Italy. The one-week-ahead forecasts are validated with out-of-sample data over successive weeks; they are found to provide timely and robust prediction of ICU capacity needs in Lombardy, the most-affected Italian region, starting from the sample of the first 2 weeks of data. The same methodology is successfully validated on other Italian regions, Switzerland and Spain. This approach may be used in other countries/regions/provinces to help adapt the health care system response to COVID-19 (or other similar disease); for this purpose, the open-source software code to produce the forecasts is provided with the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Is the Euro up for Grabs? Evidence from a Survey Experiment.
- Author
-
Baccaro, Lucio, Bremer, Björn, and Neimanns, Erik
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,EURO ,MONETARY unions ,EVIDENCE - Abstract
Copyright of Max-Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung Discussion Papers is the property of Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
37. Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19): A Machine Learning Bibliometric Analysis.
- Author
-
DE FELICE, FRANCESCA and POLIMENI, ANTONELLA
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,MACHINE learning ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Background/Aim: To evaluate the research trends in coronavirus disease (COVID-19). Materials and Methods: A bibliometric analysis was performed using a machine learning bibliometric methodology. Information regarding publication outputs, countries, institutions, journals, keywords, funding and citation counts was retrieved from Scopus database. Results: A total of 1883 eligible papers were returned. An exponential increase in the COVID-19 publications occurred in the last months. As expected, China produced the majority of articles, followed by the United States of America, the United Kingdom and Italy. There is greater collaboration between highly contributing authors and institutions. The "BMJ" published the highest number of papers (n=129) and "The Lancet" had the most citations (n=1439). The most ubiquitous topic was COVID-19 clinical features. Conclusion: This bibliometric analysis presents the most influential references related to COVID-19 during this time and could be useful to improve understanding and management of COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Switched forced SEIRDV compartmental models to monitor COVID-19 spread and immunization in Italy.
- Author
-
Antonelli, Erminia, Piccolomini, Elena Loli, and Zama, Fabiana
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,IMMUNIZATION ,VACCINATION coverage ,BAYESIAN analysis - Abstract
This paper presents a new hybrid compartmental model for studying the COVID-19 epidemic evolution in Italy since the beginning of the vaccination campaign started on 2020/12/27 and shows forecasts of the epidemic evolution in Italy in the first six months. The proposed compartmental model subdivides the population into six compartments and extends the SEIRD model proposed in [E.L.Piccolomini and F.Zama, PLOS ONE, 15(8):1-17, 08 2020] by adding the vaccinated population and framing the global model as a hybrid-switched dynamical system. Aiming to represent the quantities that characterize the epidemic behaviour from an accurate fit to the observed data, we partition the observation time interval into sub-intervals. The model parameters change according to a switching rule depending on the data behaviour and the infection rate continuity condition. In particular, we study the representation of the infection rate both as linear and exponential piecewise continuous functions. We choose the length of sub-intervals balancing the data fit with the model complexity through the Bayesian Information Criterion. We tested the model on italian data and on local data from Emilia-Romagna region. The calibration of the model shows an excellent representation of the epidemic behaviour in both cases. Thirty days forecasts have proven to well reproduce the infection spread, better for regional than for national data. Both models produce accurate predictions of infected, but the exponential-based one perform better in most of the cases. Finally, we discuss different possible forecast scenarios obtained by simulating an increased vaccination rate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Per una “meritocrazia inclusiva”, oltre le disuguaglianze sociali: il ruolo-chiave dell’educazione prescolare.
- Author
-
CASELLI, PAOLA
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,EQUALITY ,EARLY childhood education ,CHILD development ,MERITOCRACY - Abstract
The paper focuses on the issues of merit, explored in its complex polysemy, meritocracy, and skills, placing them in relation to those of – educational, social, economic, cultural – poverty and social disadvantage, which afflict, with considerable aggravation especially in the era of Sars-Cov-2 pandemic, even Italy. The essay consists of three paragraphs. In the first two, a reference framework is outlined, on the one hand relating to the polysemic concepts of merit, and meritocracy; on the other, to the situation of poverty and social inequalities in Italy. The third paragraph, which represents the heart of the paper, is linked to the abovementioned frameworks: it highlights the key role that a widespread, accessible, and high-quality Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) play, both in supporting children’s development, both promoting a democratic and inclusive society; a society characterized by effective “merit dynamics”, open to all, so as to promote skills development and, above all, social ascent and redemption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Accounting for biosecurity in Italy under COVID-19 lockdown.
- Author
-
Antonelli, Valerio, Bigoni, Michele, Funnell, Warwick, and Cafaro, Emanuela Mattia
- Subjects
BIOSECURITY ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,STAY-at-home orders ,SOCIAL impact - Abstract
Purpose: The paper examines how accounting and accounting experts provided important contributions to the Italian government's strategy to address the COVID-19 emergency in 2020, especially in terms of implementing new rules of conduct and providing justification for penetrating interventions in the life of individuals. Design/methodology/approach: The paper adopts an interdisciplinary approach by drawing upon Agamben's concepts of the state of exception, bare life and biosecurity to understand the purposes of the decrees issued by the Italian government and data provided to the citizens in the "daily bulletin" on the crisis by the Civil Protection Department. Findings: Accounting data provided essential contributions to the government's strategy that sought to spread disquiet and uncertainty in the population to ensure compliance with the strict rules in place, thereby sustaining the management of the country under a state of exception. Social implications: The study draws attention to the way in which accounting provides justification for measures that are promoted as provisional but which have enduring effects, most importantly the ability of governments in the future to suspend the rights of individuals. It shows how accounting can influence people's behaviour and contribute to the development of a permanent state of exception that significantly increases government prerogatives. Originality/value: The work contributes to the literature on accounting and emergencies by studying the use of accounting information as a subtle means to ensure support for extreme government actions and ultimately as a political tool that promotes biosecurity as a new government paradigm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on Italian primary school children's learning: A systematic review through a psycho-social lens.
- Author
-
Trotta, Eugenio, Serio, Gianluigi, Monacis, Lucia, Carlucci, Leonardo, Marinelli, Chiara Valeria, Petito, Annamaria, Celia, Giovanna, Bonvino, Aurora, Calvio, Antonella, Stallone, Roberta, Esposito, Ciro, Fantinelli, Stefania, Sulla, Francesco, Di Fuccio, Raffaele, Salvatore, Gianpaolo, Quarto, Tiziana, and Palladino, Paola
- Subjects
SCHOOL children ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PRIMARY schools ,SCHOOL closings ,LEARNING - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic drastically affected many areas and contexts of today's society, including school and family. Several studies focused on the worldwide effects of school closures on students' learning outcomes, context, and well-being. However, the data emerging from these studies are often inconsistent and fragmentary, highlighting the need of a comprehensive analysis of the phenomenon. This need is especially urgent for the countries with the most severe school closure, like Italy. This systematic review aims to collect the opinions of parents, teachers, and students on: other dimensions of Italian primary school students affected by school closures, beyond academic performance; hypothetical agreement between the opinions of parents, teachers, and students regarding the different effects of school closures on Italian primary school students; possible differences between the effects of school closures on Italian primary school students and the students in other countries. Our search was conducted using PRISMA 2020 guidelines on Web of Science, Pubmed, Scopus, and EBSCOHost. The results obtained from 34 articles revealed a strong concern on the part of all stakeholders involved in learning during the pandemic, with evident negative effects for Italian school students. The constraint on distance learning led to a drastic change in everyone's routine, and a negative emotional change on the part of young students. Parents and teachers generally considered distance learning to be ineffective for the education of their children and students; they encountered technical-practical difficulties in the use of electronic devices for participation in school activities; overall learning deficits on the part of students, especially in mathematics, as confirmed by INVALSI results were also found. The investigation reveals a condition of shared emotional and academic performance difficulty, and a further challenging circumstance for students previously at risk of marginalization. Further research in this field is paramount to identify new and adequate recovery strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. DEVELOPING AND DEVELOPED MEDITERRANEAN STOCK EXCHANGES: INTERDEPENDENCE IN PERIODS OF CRISIS AND STABILITY.
- Author
-
SRBINOSKA, Dusica STEVCEVSKA and MEMISHI, Shenasi
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,FINANCIAL crises ,STOCK price indexes ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,STOCKS (Finance) - Abstract
This research aims to explore how the stock exchange indexes of developed and developing Mediterranean countries are interrelated, both during times of crisis and stability. Specifically, it examines the association between Macedonia's MBI10 index and the stock exchange indexes of Serbia (BELEX15), Italy (FTSE MIB), and Spain (IBEX35) from 2005 to 2022 using monthly data. To understand how crises impact the relationships between these markets, the study breaks down the timeframe into four distinct periods: before the Great Financial Crisis (pre-GFC), during the GFC, after the GFC (post- GFC), and during the Covid-19 pandemic and energy crisis. Through Pearson correlation and linear regression analyses, the findings show that the MBI10's correlation with the BELEX15, FTSE MIB, and IBEX35 indexes was strongest during the GFC. However, this correlation dropped significantly during the Covid-19 pandemic and energy crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Role of the Digital for the Third Sector in the Campania Region (Italy): From the Side of Research to the Side of the Objects in the Aftermath of the COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Author
-
Punziano, Gabriella, Cicellin, Mariavittoria, Zito, Eugenio, Acampa, Suania, and Sorrentino, Rosa
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,HIGH technology industries ,DIGITAL transformation ,DIGITAL technology ,SOCIAL impact - Abstract
This paper aims to investigate the role of the digital in facing the social and practical impact of COVID-19 pandemic on particularly fragile and affected realities, Third Sector Organizations (TSO), in a context pervaded by structural and socio-economic weaknesses, the Campania Region in the South of Italy. It analyzes the digital object as: 1. a process - digitization/digitalization and digital transformation; 2. a scenario - in which identities, activities and alternative spaces of use or data collection transit and are constructed; 3. skills and capabilities - as social capital and value. This re-framing work is intended to be a useful tool for reflecting on the role of digital in research processes, while also offering a contribution in the debate on the Third Sector in contexts of crisis, such as the one generated by the COVID-19 pandemic, that impacts its existence, activity, shape, and perspectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Effects of Visitor Influx on the Indoor Climate of the Milan Cathedral.
- Author
-
Huerto-Cardenas, Harold Enrique, Aste, Niccolò, Del Pero, Claudio, Della Torre, Stefano, Leonforte, Fabrizio, and Blavier, Camille Luna Stella
- Subjects
CATHEDRALS ,HEAT capacity ,BUILDING operation management ,HYGROTHERMOELASTICITY ,COVID-19 pandemic ,HISTORIC buildings - Abstract
The indoor climate of non-climatized churches is usually subject to cyclical fluctuations of temperature and relative humidity induced by external climate conditions which might be dampened by the high thermal capacity of their envelope. However, several phenomena affect their indoor climate (e.g., internal gains due to people and artificial lighting, air infiltration, etc.), which lead to environmental variations that might jeopardize the artworks contained within. In particular, one of the most influential parameters that may affect non-climatized churches is the massive and intermittent presence of people who constantly visit their spaces. In such regard, long-term monitoring allows the collection of environmental data with different building operation conditions and visitor fluxes. This paper analyses the indoor climate of the Milan Cathedral (Duomo di Milano) in Italy for three continuous years (including the lockdown period that occurred in 2020 caused by the COVID-19 pandemic), with a focus on visitors' effects on the indoor environment and the conservation of the main artworks contained within. The results of the analysis have shown that spaces with huge volume are most influenced by the opening of the doors rather than the hygrothermal contribution of the intermittent presence of massive crowds. Moreover, the absence of visitors for a prolonged period correlates with an improvement in the indoor conservation conditions for artworks, especially those made of hygroscopic materials, due to the reduction in short, rapid climate fluctuations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The role of science in a crisis: Talks by political leaders during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
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Loner, Enzo, Fattorini, Eliana, and Bucchi, Massimiano
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COVID-19 pandemic ,POLITICIANS ,SCIENTIFIC apparatus & instruments ,POLITICAL communication ,EUROPEAN integration - Abstract
During the COVID-19 pandemic, science has been prominently featured in institutional communication and political agendas as never before. Governments substantially relied on scientific experts to analyze pandemic trends, develop anti-COVID-19 vaccines and adopt containment strategies. In this paper, we analyze speeches by three political leaders–Boris Johnson (Prime Minister, UK), Sergio Mattarella (President of the Republic, Italy), and Ursula von der Leyen (President, European Commission)–between February 20, 2020, and February 20, 2022, to identify how science was addressed and framed. The results of the quantitative and qualitative exploration of the speeches highlight three main ways in which political leaders view science: a national pride narrative–i.e., science as an instrument and indicator of national pride and international standing of the country; an ethical narrative–i.e., science as an agent of social growth; an integration narrative–i.e., science as a driving force of both European integration and stronger collaboration between knowledge production and industry. The predominant narrative varies in relation to the political leaders' different institutional contexts and roles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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46. Lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic: the ethics of coercive vaccination policies - where should we draw the line?
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Yan Ting Alarica Tay
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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]
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- 2023
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47. A Survey on Perceived Indoor Acoustic Quality by Workers from Home during COVID-19 Lockdown in Italy.
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Scamoni, Fabio, Salamone, Francesco, and Scrosati, Chiara
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COVID-19 pandemic ,TELECOMMUTING ,STAY-at-home orders ,ITALIANS ,DOMESTIC space ,DWELLINGS - Abstract
From March 2020, Italians experienced lockdown due to COVID-19 pandemic. People had to share common living spaces with family members for an extended period converting their home into workplaces. This resulted in changes to everyday life noises with implications in terms of perception of indoor acoustic quality. An online survey was designed and distributed to Italian residents to assess how they perceived the indoor quality of domestic spaces when working from home. A total of 330 questionnaires were collected and analyzed. The paper reports the results of the analyses carried out, focusing on the acoustic quality in home spaces and the satisfaction of the respondents, including an analysis of the housing context. Most respondents attach great importance to the acoustic aspects in judging the quality of the living environment and believe that the acoustic quality can improve the performance of their work. The comparison between pre-lockdown and lockdown periods shows that noises inside the building prevail over those coming from the outside and annoyance is mainly due to noise from shared spaces. The results of this study highlighted how the COVID-19 lockdown was a unique opportunity to draw attention to the importance of the indoor acoustic quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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48. Emergency Department Visits among Cancer Patients during SARS-CoV-2 Pandemic.
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Valsecchi, Davide, Porcu, Luca, Khater, Abdelrahman, Battista, Rosa Alessia, Giordano, Leone, Cascinu, Stefano, Assanelli, Andrea, Lazzari, Chiara, Gregorc, Vanesa, and Mirabile, Aurora
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TUMOR treatment ,HOSPICE care ,CANCER patient psychology ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,CROSS-sectional method ,WORK design ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,PATIENTS ,FEAR ,MEDICAL care use ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,STAY-at-home orders ,DEATH ,TUMORS ,ANXIETY ,WORRY ,COVID-19 pandemic ,DISCHARGE planning ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress - Abstract
Simple Summary: During COVID 19 pandemic, cancer patients, their caregivers and physicians needed to balance the challenges associated with pandemic ensuring cancer care. In this paper, we analysed ED visits during the 72 days of the pandemic in 2020 (Italian lockdown period) and compared them to the ED visits in the same calendar days in 2019 and 2021. We compared their severity, outcome (admission vs. discharge vs. death vs. hospice/palliative care), method of arrival to the ED and type of tumours affecting patients, suggesting that pandemic related emotional distress and hospital departmental reorganization could have nega-tively influenced ED admissions. Our aim was to highlight how much the government restrictive measures could have had an impact on emergency care for fragile patients such as cancer patients and help to understand how to reconcile the health needs of a specific class of patients with the need to protect public health. The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has had a global impact. Patients with cancer, their caregivers, and physicians need to balance the challenges associated with COVID-19 while ensuring cancer care. Nevertheless, emotional distress and hospital departmental reorganization could have led to a decrease in ED admissions even among oncological patients. Methods: We compared the 72 days of the pandemic in 2020 with the same calendar days in 2019 and 2021, defining a 20% decrease in ED visits as clinically significant. We studied the cause for visit, its severity, outcome (admission vs. discharge vs. death vs. hospice/palliative care), the tumor site, and method of arrival to the ED for the 3 time periods. Results: A significant decrease in ED oncological visits was found in 2020 compared to 2019, before returning to similar numbers in 2021. Fear, anxiety, and worry, in addition to hospital departmental reorganization, surely had an important role in the delay of ED visits, which resulted in irreparable consequences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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49. The perceived impact of Covid-19 pandemic on the children with cerebral palsy: the parents' perspective explored within the "6-F words" framework.
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Pizzighello, Silvia, Uliana, Marianna, Martinuzzi, Michela, Vascello, Matteo G. F., Cipriani, Martina, Breda, Martina, De Polo, Gianni, and Martinuzzi, Andrea
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PARENT attitudes ,MEDICAL rehabilitation ,NOSOLOGY ,PSYCHOLOGY of children with disabilities ,PARENTS of children with disabilities ,AGE distribution ,HEALTH status indicators ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,PATIENTS ,PHYSICAL fitness ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,STAY-at-home orders ,CEREBRAL palsy ,HEALTH impact assessment ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,FAMILY relations ,COVID-19 pandemic ,LONGITUDINAL method ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: In 2020 the world faced the spread of the coronavirus infection disease (Covid-19). This was a general public health emergency but many people with disabilities might have been particularly affected. Objective: This paper aims to investigate the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on children with Cerebral Palsy (CP) and their families. Methods: 110 parents of children with CP (aged 2 to 19) who completed a questionnaire were included. These children were under the care of one of the Italian Children Rehabilitation Centers. Socio-demographic and clinical information about patients and their families were collected. In addition, difficulties on adopting protective measures and in respecting lockdown rules by children were explored. We adopted the ICF (International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health) framework to create multiple choice questions. Descriptive statistics were reported and logistic regression analyses were run in order to identify the predictors of perceived impairment in motor, speech, manual and behavioral abilities. Results: Daily activities of children, as well as rehabilitation and fitness sessions, underwent a change during the pandemic. Spending more time with family due to lockdown measures, has had, in some cases a positive effect however there was a perceived decrease in rehabilitation support and school activities. The age range (between 7 and 12 years) and difficulty in respecting rules emerged as significant predictors of the perceived impairment due to Covid-19 pandemic. Conclusions: The pandemic has had different impacts on children and their families on the basis of children's characteristics. Rehabilitation activities during a hypothetic lockdown should consider these characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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50. Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on Treatment and Outcome of Fragility Hip Fractures In Non-COVID Patients: Comparison Between the Lockdown Period, a Historical Series and the "Pandemic Normality" in a Single Institution.
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Troiano, Elisa, De Sensi, Alice Giulia, Zanasi, Francesco, Facchini, Andrea, De Marco, Giulia, Battista Colasanti, Giovanni, Mondanelli, Nicola, and Giannotti, Stefano
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KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,ORTHOPEDIC surgery ,HIP fractures ,SURGICAL complications ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,OSTEOPOROSIS ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,CHI-squared test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,STAY-at-home orders ,DATA analysis software ,COVID-19 pandemic ,BONE fractures ,COMORBIDITY - Abstract
Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic has affected and is still deeply affecting all aspects of public life. World governments have been forced to enact restrictive measures to stem the contagion which have led to a decrease in the movement of people within national territory and to a redirection of health care resources with a suspension of nonurgent procedures. In Italy, a lockdown was imposed from March 9th to May 3rd, 2020. As a result, a significant reduction in the overall operative volume of orthopedic trauma was expected, but it was not possible to predict a similar trend regarding fragility fractures of the proximal femur in the elderly. Methods: The aim of this paper was to examine the impact of COVID-19 on the operating volume for trauma surgeries and to determine how the pandemic affected the management of fragility hip fractures (FHFs) in non-COVID patients at a single Institution. Results: The first result was a statistically significant reduction in the overall operative volume of orthopedic trauma during the period of the first lockdown and an increase in the mean age of patients undergoing surgery, as expected. As regard to the second aim, the incidence of FHFs remained almost unchanged during the periods analysed. The population examined were superimposable in terms of demographics, comorbidities, type of fracture, peri-operative complications, percentage of operations performed within 48 hours from hospitalization and 1-year outcome. Discussion: Our results are in line with those already present in the Literature. Conclusions: Our study revealed a significant impact of the restrictive anticontagion measures on the overall orthopedic surgical volume, but, at the same time, we could affirm that the pandemic did not affect the management of FHFs in non-COVID patients, and their results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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