7 results on '"Toffanin, Tommaso"'
Search Results
2. Exploring weight bias and negative self-evaluation in patients with mood disorders: insights from the BodyTalk Project.
- Author
-
Meneguzzo, Paolo, Behrens, Simone C., Pavan, Chiara, Toffanin, Tommaso, Quiros-Ramirez, M. Alejandra, Black, Michael J., Giel, Katrin E., Tenconi, Elena, and Favaro, Angela
- Subjects
DISCRIMINATION against overweight persons ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,BODY image ,SELF-evaluation ,BODY weight ,BODY size - Abstract
Background: Negative body image and adverse body self-evaluation represent key psychological constructs within the realm of weight bias (WB), potentially intertwined with the negative self-evaluation characteristic of depressive symptomatology. Although WB encapsulates an implicit form of self-critical assessment, its exploration among people with mood disorders (MD) has been under-investigated. Our primary goal is to comprehensively assess both explicit and implicit WB, seeking to reveal specific dimensions that could interconnect with the symptoms of MDs. Methods: A cohort comprising 25 MD patients and 35 demographically matched healthy peers (with 83% female representation) participated in a series of tasks designed to evaluate the congruence between various computer-generated body representations and a spectrum of descriptive adjectives. Our analysis delved into multiple facets of body image evaluation, scrutinizing the associations between different body sizes and emotionally charged adjectives (e.g., active, apple-shaped, attractive). Results: No discernible differences emerged concerning body dissatisfaction or the correspondence of different body sizes with varying adjectives. Interestingly, MD patients exhibited a markedly higher tendency to overestimate their body weight (p = 0.011). Explicit WB did not show significant variance between the two groups, but MD participants demonstrated a notable implicit WB within a specific weight rating task for BMI between 18.5 and 25 kg/m² (p = 0.012). Conclusions: Despite the striking similarities in the assessment of participants' body weight, our investigation revealed an implicit WB among individuals grappling with MD. This bias potentially assumes a role in fostering selfdirected negative evaluations, shedding light on a previously unexplored facet of the interplay between WB and mood disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Changes of consultation-liaison psychiatry practice in Italian general hospitals: A comparative 20-year multicenter study.
- Author
-
Zerbinati, Luigi, Palagini, Laura, Balestrieri, Matteo, Murri, Martino Belvederi, Caruso, Rosangela, D’Agostino, Armando, Ferrara, Maria, Ferrari, Silvia, Minervino, Antonino, Milia, Paolo, Nanni, Maria Giulia, Pini, Stefano, Politi, Pierluigi, Porcellana, Matteo, Rocchetti, Matteo, Taddei, Ines, Toffanin, Tommaso, and Grassi, Luigi
- Subjects
CONSULTATION-liaison psychiatry ,PEOPLE with mental illness ,PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis ,MOOD stabilizers ,MENTAL depression - Abstract
Introduction: Conducted under the auspices of the Italian Society of Consultation Liaison Psychiatry (SIPC) the aim of this study was to describe the characteristics of Consultation Liaison Psychiatry (CLP) activity in Italy (SIPC2—2018) over the past 20 years by comparing with data from the first Italian nation-wide study (SIPC-1—1998). Methods: We collected data on CLP visits of 3,943 patients from 10 Italian hospitals over a period of 1 year. Data were compared with those from the SIPC-1 1998 study (4,183 participants). Patients were assessed with the same ad hoc 60-item Patient Registration Form recording information from five different areas: Sociodemographic, hospitalization-related, consultation related, interventions and outcome. Results: Compared with participants from the previous study, SIPC-2- 2018 participants were significantly older (d = 0.54) and hospitalized for a longer duration (d = 0.20). The current study detected an increase in the proportion of referrals from surgical wards and for individuals affected by onco-hematologic diseases. Depressive disorders still represented the most frequent psychiatric diagnosis, followed by adjustment and stress disorders and delirium/dementia. Also, CLP psychiatrists prescribed more often antidepressants (8 = 0.13), antipsychotics (8 = 0.09), mood stabilizers (8 = 0.24), and less often benzodiazepines (8 = 0.07). Conclusion: CLP workload has increased considerably in the past 20 years in Italy, with changes in patient demographic and clinical characteristics. A trend toward increase in medication-based patient management was observed. These findings suggest that the psychiatric needs of patients admitted to the general hospital are more frequently addressed by referring physicians, although Italian CLP services still deserve better organization and autonomy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. SELF-ORIENTED EMPATHY AND PERSONALITY ORGANISATION LEVEL: INSIGHTS FROM A PSYCHIATRIC SAMPLE.
- Author
-
Pick, Emanuele, Pavan, Chiara, Marini, Massimo, Cariolato, Ylenia, Bogliolo, Elisabetta, Toffanin, Tommaso, and Palmieri, Arianna
- Subjects
INTERPERSONAL Reactivity Index ,SYMPTOM Checklist-90-Revised ,PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis ,PERSONALITY ,EMPATHY ,PSYCHODYNAMICS - Abstract
Objective: Empathy functioning is among the criteria to delineate psychiatric diagnosis. However, the self-oriented empathy dimension is almost neglected in the existing literature. On the basis of previous fragmented contributions, we hypothesised that an individual's level of personality organisation is explained by this facet of empathy more than the other components of empathy, both transversally and independently from the specific psychiatric diagnosis Method: Fifty-nine psychiatric inpatients were evaluated with clinical interviews inspired by the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5, completed the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised, and Interpersonal Reactivity Index (IRI). A panel of experts established each patient's psychiatric diagnosis and the level of personality organisation according to DSM-5 and PDM-2. Thirty-two patients were considered functioning at a psychotic level, 27 at a borderline level, and none at a neurotic level. Multinomial models were compared with the corrected AIC to determine if self-oriented empathy, among all IRI subscales, was the best-fitting model for explaining the levels of personality organisation. A further analogue series of models was used to investigate the best IRI subscale to explain each patient's psychiatric diagnosis Results: The first series of models revealed self-oriented empathy (IRI personal distress subscale) as the best empathic dimension to explain levels of personality organisation. The second series revealed that none of the four IRI subscales explained psychiatric diagnoses Conclusions: The consistency of our findings with evolutionary concepts pertaining to both traditional psychodynamic models and contemporary models of psychopathology, such as the p factor theory, was illustrated. Despite the many limitations of our consecutive sampling jeopardising the findings' generalisability, the insight of self-oriented empathy as the best predictor of the level of personality organisation, irrespective of psychiatric diagnosis, has several implications from both research and clinical/diagnostic perspectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Hippocampal volume in different neuropsychiatric cohorts using a semiautomatic a semiautomatic, stereological and automatic method
- Author
-
Toffanin, Tommaso
- Subjects
Morbo di Cushing, Depressione maggiore, RMN, trauma cranico, metodo semiautomatico, automatico e stereologico/Cushing's disease, MRI, major depression, traumatic brain injury, SEMIAUTOMATIC, STEREOLOGICAL AND AUTOMATIC METHOD ,Depressione maggiore ,SEMIAUTOMATIC ,traumatic brain injury ,STEREOLOGICAL AND AUTOMATIC METHOD ,automatico e stereologico/Cushing's disease ,Morbo di Cushing ,trauma cranico ,major depression ,Settore MED/25 - Psichiatria ,RMN ,metodo semiautomatico ,MRI - Published
- 2011
6. A Long Term Effects of a New Onset Psychosis after DBS Treated with Quetiapine in a Patient with Parkinson's Disease
- Author
-
Piccoli, Sara, primary, Perini, Giulia, additional, Pizzighello, Silvia, additional, Vestri, Alec, additional, Ferri, Giovanni, additional, Toffanin, Tommaso, additional, Follador, Halima, additional, and Martinuzzi, Andrea, additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A comparative meta-analysis of TEMPS scores across mood disorder patients, their first-degree relatives, healthy controls, and other psychiatric disorders
- Author
-
Tommaso Toffanin, Christoph U. Correll, Nicola Veronese, Kangguang Lin, Leonardo Zaninotto, Marco Solmi, Michele Fornaro, Brendon Stubbs, Solmi, Marco, Zaninotto, Leonardo, Toffanin, Tommaso, Veronese, Nicola, Lin, Kangguang, Stubbs, Brendon, Fornaro, Michele, Correll, Christoph U, Solmi, M., Zaninotto, L., Toffanin, T., Veronese, N., Lin, K., Stubbs, B., Fornaro, M., and Correll, C.U.
- Subjects
bipolar disorder (BD ,Bipolar Disorder ,Personality Inventory ,Affective temperament ,Major depression: bipolar disorder ,Temperament evaluation Memphis Pisa, Paris and San Diego Auto-questionnaire 110 item version (TEMPS-A-110) ,TEMPS ,Anxiety ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Surveys and Questionnaire ,Borderline personality disorder ,media_common ,Psychiatry and Mental Health ,Clinical Psychology ,major depressive disorder (MDD) ,Middle Aged ,Cyclothymic Disorder ,Irritable Mood ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Major depressive disorder ,Female ,Psychology ,Psychometric ,Human ,Clinical psychology ,Adult ,Hyperthymic temperament ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Temperament evaluation Memphis Pisa ,Adolescent ,Psychometrics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,NO ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Family ,Bipolar disorder ,Psychiatry ,Temperament ,Aged ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,Paris and San Diego Auto-questionnaire 110 item version (TEMPS-A-110) ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Affect ,Mood ,Mood disorders ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background The Temperament Evaluation Memphis, Pisa, Paris and San Diego Auto-questionnaire (TEMPS) is validated to assess temperament in clinical and non-clinical samples. Scores vary across bipolar disorder (BD), major depressive disorder (MDD), attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), borderline personality disorder (BPD) and healthy controls (HCs), but a meta-analysis is missing. Methods Meta-analysis of studies comparing TEMPS scores in patients with mood disorders or their first-degree relatives to each other, or to a psychiatric control group or HCs. Results Twenty-six studies were meta-analyzed with patients with BD (n= 2025), MDD (n=1283), ADHD (n=56) and BPD (n=43), relatives of BD (n=436), and HCs (n=1757). Cyclothymic (p
- Published
- 2015
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.