4 results on '"Lazzarini, S. G."'
Search Results
2. Rehabilitation and COVID-19: update of the rapid living systematic review by Cochrane Rehabilitation Field as of February 28, 2021
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Andrenelli E., Negrini F., De Sire A., Patrini M., Lazzarini S. G., Ceravolo M. G., Kiekens C., Arienti C., Cote P., Cusick A., Gimigliano F., Heinemann A. W., Mills J. -A., Rathore F., Rizzi M., Verheyden G., Walshe M., Negrini S., Andrenelli, E., Negrini, F., De Sire, A., Patrini, M., Lazzarini, S. G., Ceravolo, M. G., Kiekens, C., Arienti, C., Cote, P., Cusick, A., Gimigliano, F., Heinemann, A. W., Mills, J. -A., Rathore, F., Rizzi, M., Verheyden, G., Walshe, M., and Negrini, S.
- Subjects
SARS-CoV-2 ,Rehabilitation ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Pandemics ,Systematic Reviews as Topic - Published
- 2021
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3. Rehabilitation and COVID-19: A rapid living systematic review by cochrane rehabilitation field updated as of December 31st, 2020 and synthesis of the scientific literature of 2020
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de Sire A., Andrenelli E., Negrini F., Patrini M., Lazzarini S. G., Ceravolo M. G., Kiekens C., Arienti C., Cote P., Cusick A., Gimigliano F., Heinemann A., Mills J. -A., Rathore F., Rizzi M., Verheyden G., Walshe M., Negrini S., de Sire, A., Andrenelli, E., Negrini, F., Patrini, M., Lazzarini, S. G., Ceravolo, M. G., Kiekens, C., Arienti, C., Cote, P., Cusick, A., Gimigliano, F., Heinemann, A., Mills, J. -A., Rathore, F., Rizzi, M., Verheyden, G., Walshe, M., and Negrini, S.
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030506 rehabilitation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Coronaviru ,Scopus ,MEDLINE ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Scientific literature ,Disease ,CINAHL ,Coronavirus ,COVID-19 ,Physical ,Rehabilitation ,Rehabilitation Medicine ,SARS-CoV-2 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Pandemics ,business.industry ,Evidence-based medicine ,Natural history ,Physical therapy ,Periodicals as Topic ,0305 other medical science ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Introduction COVID-19 infection significantly increased mortality risk and the burden of disability in most survivors, regardless of symptom severity at onset. The rehabilitation needs of people infected are receiving growing attention, as evidenced by the increasing number of publications, including those addressing the chronic consequences of infection. This rapid living systematic review reports the evidence published in November and December 2020 and summarises the entire body of literature on rehabilitation in COVID-19 patients published in 2020. Evidence acquisition This update was performed using the methodology reported by the second edition conducted by Cochrane Rehabilitation REH-COVER Action. We searched PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, Scopus, Web of Science, and Pedro databases. Papers related to COVID-19 and rehabilitation were retrieved and summarised descriptively. Evidence synthesis The search retrieved 4441 studies. After the removal of duplicates and the screening for title and abstract, we retained 105 studies. Of these, we included 54 in the qualitative synthesis of this update. According to OCEBM 2011 levels of evidence table, most studies (64.8%) fall within the category of level 4 evidence. Up to 40.7% of papers included COVID-19 patients in the postacute phase. In 2020, our rapid living systematic review included 230 studies; most of these (73.9%) were level 4 studies, 25.7% were level 3, and only one study was level 2. The evidence level improved over time. While most studies (44.8%) included patients with acute COVID-19, we observed a gradual increase in the number of reports about chronic symptoms and the long-term consequences of the infection. Conclusions The update of the rapid living systematic review by Cochrane Rehabilitation Field demonstrates an increase in the level of evidence of studies addressing the rehabilitation needs associated with COVID-19 infection. Although most studies are still case reports/series, there is a trend towards conducting prospective investigations of the early natural history of the disease (first months post onset). High-quality-level studies on the efficacy of rehabilitation, and long-term monitoring of the disease and its sequelae are yet to emerge.
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- 2021
4. Cochrane Rehabilitation: 2020 annual report
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Valerio Iannicelli, Tracey E. Howe, Rolf Frischknecht, Frane Grubišić, Thorsten Meyer, Carlotte Kiekens, Elena Ilieva, Julia Patrick Engkasan, Roberta Bettinsoli, Elisa Pollini, Farooq Azam Rathore, Stefano Negrini, William Levack, Stefano G. Lazzarini, Michele Patrini, Chiara Arienti, Aydan Oral, Francesca Gimigliano, Arienti, C., Kiekens, C., Bettinsoli, R., Engkasan, J. P., Frischknecht, R., Gimigliano, F., Grubisic, F., Howe, T., Iannicelli, V., Ilieva, E., Lazzarini, S. G., Levack, W. M., Meyer, T., Oral, A., Patrini, M., Pollini, E., Rathore, F. A., and Negrini, S.
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Prioritization ,030506 rehabilitation ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Decision Making ,education ,MEDLINE ,Method ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Cochrane Library ,World health ,Rehabilitations ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Retrospective Studie ,Methods ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pandemics ,Retrospective Studies ,Annual report ,Rehabilitation ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,COVID-19 ,Systematic review ,0305 other medical science ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Human - Abstract
during its fourth year of existence, cochrane rehabilitation went on to promote evidence-informed health decision-making in rehabilitation. in 2020, the outbreak of the coVid-19 pandemic has made it necessary to alter priorities. in these challenging times, cochrane rehabilitation has firstly changed its internal organisation and established a new relevant project in line with pandemic needs: the REH-COVER (Rehabilitation – coVid-19 evidence-based response) action. the aim was to focus on the timely collection, review and dissemination of summarised and synthesised evidence relating to COVID-19 and rehabilitation. Cochrane Rehabilitation REH-COVER action has included in 2020 five main initiatives: 1) rapid living systematic reviews on rehabilitation and coVid-19; 2) interactive living evidence map on rehabilitation and coVid-19; 3) definition of the research topics on “rehabilitation and COVID-19” in collaboration with the World Health Organization (WHO) rehabilitation programme; 4) Cochrane Library special collection on Coronavirus (COVID-19) rehabilitation; and 5) collaboration with COVID-END for the topics “rehabilitation” and “disability.” Furthermore, we are still carrying on five different special projects: Be4rehab; RCTRACK; definition of rehabilitation for research purposes; ebook project; and a prioritization exercise for Cochrane Reviews production. The Review Working Area continued to identify and “tag” the rehabilitation-relevant reviews published in the cochrane library; the publication Working area went on to publish Cochrane Corners, working more closely with the Cochrane Review Groups (CRGs) and Cochrane Networks, particularly with Cochrane Musculoskeletal, oral, skin and sensory Network; the Education Working area, the most damaged in 2020, tried to continue performing educational activities such as workshops in different online meetings; the Methodology Working area organized the third and fourth cochrane Rehabilitation Methodological (CRM) meetings respectively in Milan and Orlando; the Communication Working Area spread rehabilitation evidences through different channels and translated the contents in different languages.
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- 2021
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