304 results on '"Casacchia, Massimo"'
Search Results
102. Soft neurological dysfunction and gender in schizophrenia
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de Calaldo, Stefano, primary, Rossi, Alessandro, additional, Di Michele, Vittorio, additional, Manna, Vincenzo, additional, and Casacchia, Massimo, additional
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- 1992
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103. Temporal lobe structure by magnetic resonance in bipolar affective disorders and schizophrenia
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Rossi, Alessandro, primary, Stratta, Paolo, additional, Di Michele, Vittorio, additional, Gallucci, Massimo, additional, Splendiani, Alessandra, additional, de Cataldo, Stefano, additional, and Casacchia, Massimo, additional
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- 1991
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104. Main clinical features in patients at their first psychiatric admission to Italian acute hospital psychiatric wards. The PERSEO study.
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Ballerini, Andrea, Boccalon, Roberto M., Boncompagni, Giancarlo, Casacchia, Massimo, Margari, Francesco, Minervini, Lina, Righi, Roberto, Russo, Federico, Salteri, Andrea, Frediani, Sonia, Rossi, Andrea, and Scatigna, Marco
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PSYCHIATRY ,MENTAL depression ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,HOSPITAL wards ,BENZODIAZEPINES - Abstract
Background: Few data are available on subjects presenting to acute wards for the first time with psychotic symptoms. The aims of this paper are (i) to describe the epidemiological and clinical characteristics of patients at their first psychiatric admission (FPA), including socio-demographic features, risk factors, life habits, modalities of onset, psychiatric diagnoses and treatments before admission; (ii) to assess the aggressive behavior and the clinical management of FPA patients in Italian acute hospital psychiatric wards, called SPDCs (Servizio Psichiatrico Diagnosi e Cura = psychiatric service for diagnosis and management). Method: Cross-sectional observational multi-center study involving 62 Italian SPDCs (PERSEO -- Psychiatric EmeRgency Study and EpidemiOlogy). Results: 253 FPA aged <= 40 were identified among 2521 patients admitted to Italian SPDCs over the 5-month study period. About half of FPA patients showed an aggressive behavior as defined by a Modified Overt Aggression Scale (MOAS) score greater than 0 Vs 46% of non-FPA patients (p = 0.3651). The most common was verbal aggression, while about 20% of FPA patients actually engaged in physical aggression against other people. 74% of FPA patients had no diagnosis at admission, while 40% had received a previous psychopharmacological treatment, mainly benzodiazepines and antidepressants. During SPDC stay, diagnosis was established in 96% of FPA patients and a pharmacological therapy was prescribed to 95% of them, mainly benzodiazepines, antipsychotics and mood stabilizers. Conclusion: Subjects presenting at their first psychiatric ward admission have often not undergone previous adequate psychiatric assessment and diagnostic procedures. The first hospital admission allows diagnosis and psychopharmacological treatment to be established. In our population, aggressive behaviors were rather frequent, although most commonly verbal. Psychiatric symptoms, as evaluated by psychiatrists and patients, improved significantly from admission to discharge both for FPA and non-FPA patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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105. Increase of Spontaneous Blink Associated with Extrapyramidal Side Effects
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ROSSI, ALESSANDRO, primary, DECATALDO, STEFANO, additional, BOLINO, FRANCESCA, additional, PACITTI, FRANCESCA, additional, STRATTA, PAOLO, additional, and CASACCHIA, MASSIMO, additional
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- 1990
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106. Brain Imaging as a Tool to Investigate Heterogeneity of Schizophrenia: a Magnetic Resonance Study
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Stratta, Paolo, primary, Rossi, Alessandro, additional, Michele, Vittorio di, additional, de Cataldo, Stefano, additional, Gallucci, Massimo, additional, Splendiani, Alessandra, additional, Ceccoli, Simona, additional, and Casacchia, Massimo, additional
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- 1990
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107. Etizolam in the treatment of generalized anxiety disorder: a double-blind study versus placebo
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Casacchia, Massimo, primary, Bolino, Francesca, additional, and Ecari, Ugo, additional
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- 1990
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108. Psychoeducational treatments in schizophrenia: love for foreigners or application of evidence-based interventions?
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Casacchia, Massimo and Roncone, Rita
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- 1999
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109. MR Imaging of White Matter Lesions in Uncomplicated Chronic Alcoholism.
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Gallucci, Massimo, Amicarelli, Irene, Rossi, Alessandro, Stratta, Paolo, Masciocchi, Carlo, Zobel, Bruno Beomonte, Casacchia, Massimo, and Passariello, Roberto
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- 1989
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110. Quantitative computed tomographic study in schizophrenia: cerebral density and ventricle measures.
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Rossi, Alessandro, Stratta, Paolo, D'Albenzio, Luigi, Di Michele, Vittorio, Serio, Antonio, Giordano, Luigi, Petruzzi, Concetta, and Casacchia, Massimo
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- 1989
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111. Brain morphology in schizophrenia by Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI).
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Rossi, Alessandro, Stratta, Paolo, Gallucci, Massimo, Passariello, Roberto, and Casacchia, Massimo
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- 1988
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112. Relapsing versus non relapsing course of schizophrenia: a cohort study in a community based mental health service
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Di Michele, Vittorio, Bolino, Francesca, Mazza, Monica, Roncone, Rita, and Casacchia, Massimo
- Abstract
SUMMARYAim- We examined the effect of several clinical variables on the tendency to relapse and to require hospitalization in a cohort of patients, living in the community and followed up naturalistically for seven years. Method- Forty-six patients affected by schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder, according to both DSM-IV and ICD-10 criteria, were assessed by Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale and Life Skills Profile (LSP). All patients consecutively enrolled, were assessed in a stable clinical phase of illness and treated as usual by their reference psychiatrist. Social and clinical outcome was assessed yearly for seven years after the study entry and analyzed with survival analysis. Results- Patients who did not relapse, were characterized by higher functioning, lower positive symptoms, higher ability in self-care and non-turbulence and higher IQ at their baseline clinical evaluation. These variables were entered in a Cox regression model to corroborate the predictive power on the relapsing course of illness. Only IQ and non-turbulence scores of LSP were entered in the equation (Wald method: p=0.007 and p=0.002 respectively). Conclusions- Several factors interact with the course of illness and influence the tendency to require hospitalization. In the present study we report that non-turbulence is a significant predictor of a non-relapsing course of illness. Further studies are needed to clarify the role of other mediating variables.Declaration of Interest: none.
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- 2007
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113. Is Theory of Mind in Schizophrenia More Strongly Associated with Clinical and Social Functioning than with Neurocognitive Deficits?
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Pollice, Rocco, Roncone, Rita, Falloon, Ian R.H., Mazza, Monica, De Risio, Alessandro, Necozione, Stefano, Morosini, PierLuigi, and Casacchia, Massimo
- Abstract
AbstractThis paper examines the correlations between ‘Theory of Mind’ (ToM) and neurocognitive performance, together with clinical and social functioning, in out-patients with schizophrenic disorders. It was hypothesised that, since the ability to make inferences about the environment and about other peoples’ mental states is a key ingredient of social competence, the assessment of ToM would correlate more strongly with current social functioning than with more traditional neurocognitive measures. ‘Independent raters’ assessed Theory of Mind, neurocognitive and clinical variables as well as community functioning in 44 subjects with schizophrenia. The neuropsychological measures were more closely associated with community functioning than with psychiatric symptoms. These associations remained evident when the effects of intelligence were controlled. Patients with a higher level of competence in making social inferences had better overall community functioning than those who showed less ability in this aspect of social cognition. In a regression model, the capacity to comprehend other people’s mental states (ToM-2) was among the best predictors of global social functioning, together with recent onset of illness, good verbal fluency and low levels of negative and positive symptoms. These results are consistent with other recent findings. ToM measures of social cognition may be a useful addition to neuropsychological assessment when developing programmes for reducing clinical impairments and improving the community functioning of subjects with schizophrenic disorders. Further studies are needed to verify the value of these measures as predictors of the successful application of specific psychosocial rehabilitation strategies.Copyright © 2002 S. Karger AG, Basel
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- 2002
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114. Flunarizine-Pizotifen Single-Dose Double-Blind Cross-Over Trial in Migraine Prophylaxis
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Cerbo, Rosanna, Casacchia, Massimo, Formisano, Rita, Feliciani, Massimo, Cusimano, Giuliana, Buzzi, Maria Gabriella, and Agnoli, Alessandro
- Abstract
The results of a double-blind cross-over clinical trial involving 27 patients with classical or common migraine are described to compare the prophylactic effect of the calcium entry-blocker flunarizine with that of pizotifen. Duration of the treatment was two months, with an evening single-dose administration of both drugs. For most parameters, there was no definite difference between flunarizine and pizotifen in migraine prophylaxis. It has been demonstrated previously that pizotifen is an effective drug in migraine prophylaxis, and these results suggest that flunarizine is effective, too. Weight gain as a side effect was less frequent and less severe with flunarizine than with pizotifen; other side effects showed the same incidence with both drugs.
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- 1986
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115. Rassegna dei fattori implicati nella genesi delle depressioni: proposta di una ipotesi unitaria
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Borgo, Stefania, Sibilia, Lucio, Casacchia, Massimo, and Carchedi, Francesco
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- 1977
116. Studio neurofarmacologico della sindrome extrapiramidale acuta in corso di terapia con neurolettici
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Casacchia, Massimo, Ruggeri, Stefani, Zamponi, Andrea, Agnoli, Alessandro, and Sibilia, Lucio
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- 1976
117. Quantification of Corpus Callosum and Ventricles in Schizophrenia With Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Imaging: A Pilot Study.
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Rossi, Alessandro, Stratta, Paolo, Gallucci, Massimo, Passariello, Roberto, and Casacchia, Massimo
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SCHIZOPHRENIA ,PEOPLE with schizophrenia ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,CORPUS callosum ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging - Abstract
Twelve chronic schizophrenic patients and 12 normal control subjects underwent magnetic resonance imaging of the brain. The schizophrenic patients had a significantly smaller corpus callosum area and higher ventricle-brain ratio than the control subjects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1989
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118. Corpus cllosum in Schizophrenia
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Rossi, Alessandro, primary, Stratta, Paolo, additional, Casacchia, Massimo, additional, Gallucci, Massimo, additional, and Passariello, Roberta, additional
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- 1987
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119. Failure to convulse with ECT
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di Michele, Vittorio, primary, Rossi, Alessandro, additional, Casacchia, Massimo, additional, D'Albenzio, Luigi, additional, Nisticó, Rosanna, additional, and Giordano, Luigi, additional
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- 1989
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120. Hemispheric asymmetries and schizophrenia: A preliminary magnetic resonance imaging study
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Stratta, Paolo, primary, Rossi, Alessandro, additional, Gallucci, Massimo, additional, Amicarelli, Irene, additional, Passariello, Roberto, additional, and Casacchia, Massimo, additional
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- 1989
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121. PROLACTIN RESPONSE TO REPEATED ELECTROCONVULSIVE THERAPY IN ACUTE SCHIZOPHRENIA
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Meco, Giuseppe, primary, Casacchia, Massimo, additional, Carchedi, Francesco, additional, Falaschi, Paolo, additional, Rocco, Antonio, additional, and Frajese, Gaetano, additional
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- 1978
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122. Standardized magnetic resonance image intensity study in Schizophrenia
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Rossi, Alessandro, primary, Stratta, Paolo, additional, Gallucci, Massimo, additional, Amicarelli, Irene, additional, Passariello, Roberto, additional, and Casacchia, Massimo, additional
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- 1988
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123. A computerised tomographic study in DSM-III affective disorders
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Rossi, Alessandro, primary, Stratta, Paolo, additional, Petruzzi, Concetta, additional, De Donatis, Mauro, additional, Nisticò, Rosanna, additional, and Casacchia, Massimo, additional
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- 1987
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124. Thyrotropin-releasing hormone test in recently abstinent alcoholics
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Casacchia, Massimo, primary, Rossi, Alessandro, additional, and Stratta, Paolo, additional
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- 1985
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125. Cortical and subcortical computed tomographic study in schizophrenia
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Rossi, Alessandro, primary, Stratta, Paolo, additional, de Cataldo, Stefano, additional, Di Michelle, Vittorio, additional, Orfanelli, Giuseppe, additional, Antonio, Serio, additional, Petruzzi, Concetta, additional, and Casacchia, Massimo, additional
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- 1988
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126. AMANTADINE VERSUS L-DOPA AND AMANTADINE PLUS L-DOPA
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Fieschi, Cesare, primary, Nardini, Marcello, additional, Casacchia, Massimo, additional, ELISABETTA TEDONE, Maria, additional, Reitano, Massimo, additional, and Robotti, Ermanno, additional
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- 1970
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127. AMANTADINE FOR PARKINSON'S DISEASE
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Fieschi, Cesare, primary, Nardini, Marcello, additional, Casacchia, Massimo, additional, Tedone, M.Elisabetta, additional, and Robotti, Ermanno, additional
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- 1970
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128. Fluoxetine in Premature Ejaculation.
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Stratta, Paolo, Mancini, Fabrizio, Cupillari, Maurizio, Rossi, Alessandro, and Casacchia, Massimo
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LETTERS to the editor ,PREMATURE ejaculation - Abstract
Presents a letter to the editor on fluoxetine in premature ejaculation.
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- 1993
129. Italian Investigation on Mental Health Workers' Attitudes Regarding Personal Recovery From Mental Illness.
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Giusti, Laura, Ussorio, Donatella, Salza, Anna, Malavolta, Maurizio, Aggio, Annalisa, Bianchini, Valeria, Casacchia, Massimo, and Roncone, Rita
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CONVALESCENCE , *CURRICULUM planning , *PSYCHOLOGY of medical students , *MENTAL health personnel , *REHABILITATION of people with mental illness , *NURSES' attitudes , *MENTAL orientation , *PROFESSIONS , *RISK-taking behavior , *SEX distribution , *PSYCHOLOGY of social workers , *DECISION making in clinical medicine , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *ATTITUDES toward mental illness , *WORK experience (Employment) , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This study aimed to investigate attitudes toward personal recovery in a sample of 436 healthcare professionals and students of psychiatric rehabilitation techniques through the Italian version of the recovery knowledge inventory (RKI). The sample in our study showed a good global orientation toward recovery. Statistically significant differences were found among mental health professionals based on gender difference, professional role, and level of experience. Women seemed more inclined to accept users' decision-making processes, including therapeutic risk-taking. Nurses seemed more cautious in considering the users able to "live beyond their illness". Professionals with fewer than 15 years of experience had more favorable attitudes and expectations than the more experienced respondents. Students had more optimistic expectations regarding recovery than nurses and social workers. Academic curriculum development for students and training courses for mental health professionals could further improve the homogeneity in attitudes and skills in the support of users' "unique" recovery processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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130. Family functioning and personal growth in Italian caregivers living with a family member affected by schizophrenia: Results of an add-on study of the Italian network for research on psychoses
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Rita Roncone, Laura Giusti, Valeria Bianchini, Massimo Casacchia, Bernardo Carpiniello, Eugenio Aguglia, Mario Altamura, Stefano Barlati, Antonello Bellomo, Paola Bucci, Giammarco Cascino, Carmen Concerto, Andrea Fagiolini, Carlo Marchesi, Alessio Maria Monteleone, Federica Pinna, Alberto Siracusano, Silvana Galderisi, Roncone, Rita, Giusti, Laura, Bianchini, Valeria, Casacchia, Massimo, Carpiniello, Bernardo, Aguglia, Eugenio, Altamura, Mario, Barlati, Stefano, Bellomo, Antonello, Bucci, Paola, Cascino, Giammarco, Concerto, Carmen, Fagiolini, Andrea, Marchesi, Carlo, Monteleone, Alessio Maria, Pinna, Federica, Siracusano, Alberto, and Galderisi, Silvana
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schizophrenia ,personal growth ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,burden of illne ,burden of illness ,family functioning ,burden of illness, schizophrenia, family caregivers, family functioning, personal growth ,family caregivers ,family caregiver - Abstract
To date, the role of family members in caring for relatives affected by schizophrenia has focused largely on the negative aspects of impact of the illness. The present study aimed to: (1) assess family functioning and burden of care in caregivers living in Northern, Central, and Southern Italy who looked after subjects affected by chronic schizophrenia; (2) evaluate the relationship between aspects of family functioning and burden of care, in particular personal growth (PG) of caregivers; and (3) identify variables capable of affecting PG of caregivers. A total of 136 caregivers (mean length of illness of family member more than 20 years) were recruited from 9 Italian research sites and evaluated in terms of “positive” family functioning–problem-solving, communication skills and personal goals Family Functioning Questionnaire (FFQ), burden of care, and PG Family Problems Questionnaire (FPQ). Caregivers reported an overall good family functioning with a relatively low objective and subjective burden of care. The latter was positively correlated with length of illness, with women showing a higher subjective burden than men. Reduced problem-solving skills and ability of each family member to pursue personal goals were both associated with reduced objective and subjective burden which, conversely, were both increased by inadequate support and scarce positive comments from relatives and friends. Approximately 50% of caregivers stated that “they had learned something positive from the situation,” highlighting a statistically higher proportion of caregivers in southern Italy than in northern and central Italy. Caregivers’ PG was associated with good family functioning, adequate professional support, and positive comments. PG also seemed to be positively influenced by support from relatives and friends (O.R. 14.306). The numerous challenges and positive aspects associated with caregiving should be duly acknowledged by mental health services and integrated into routine clinical assessment and intervention framework.
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- 2023
131. 6 - Cognitive-Behavioral Strategies for the Treatment of Schizophrenic Disorders
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Falloon, Ian R.H., Morosini, Pierluigi, Roncone, Rita, Casacchia, Massimo, Coverdale, John, Economon, Marina, Erickson, Dave, Grawe, Rolf, Harangozo, Judit, Held, Tilo, Ivarsson, Bo, Malm, Ulf, Lussetti, Marco, Mizuno, Masafumi, Murakami, Masaaki, and Ventura, Joseph
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- 1998
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132. Metacognitive training for young subjects ( MCT young version) in the early stages of psychosis: Is the duration of untreated psychosis a limiting factor?
- Author
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Ussorio, Donatella, Giusti, Laura, Wittekind, Charlotte E., Bianchini, Valeria, Malavolta, Maurizio, Pollice, Rocco, Casacchia, Massimo, and Roncone, Rita
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PSYCHOSES , *PSYCHIATRIC treatment , *COGNITION , *COGNITIVE therapy , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *SOCIAL skills , *THOUGHT & thinking , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DISEASE duration - Abstract
Objectives The treatment program 'Metacognitive training for patients with schizophrenia' ( MCT) addresses cognitive biases assumed to play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of delusions (e.g., jumping to conclusions, theory of mind deficits). The aim of our study was to examine the effectiveness and the feasibility of this intervention targeted to early phases of psychosis ( MCT young version). Design An experimental design included two groups of subjects on the basis of their duration of untreated psychosis ( DUP) 'short' (less or equal than 12 months) and 'long' DUP (longer than 12 months), assessed at baseline and after the 4-month intervention. Methods Fifty-six young subjects affected by early psychosis were assessed on psychopathology, social functioning, neurocognitive, and metacognitive measures. The primary outcome was the reduction of psychopathology. Secondary outcomes included reduction of cognitive and emotional dysfunction and improvement of social functioning. Results At the end of the 4-month MCT, both groups showed significant improvements in many variables: positive symptoms, cognitive functions, as verbal memory, attention and mental flexibility, and metacognitive functions, as cognitive insight. Significant and positive changes were found in theory of mind abilities and social perception. Conclusions The difference in DUP between the two groups of young subjects of our sample did not seem to influence the intervention outcomes, still taking into account that the average difference between the two groups in terms of DUP is 12.6 months. Practitioner points Metacognition refers to the general ability 'to think about thinking,' that is, the ability to think about one's mental state and the mental states of others. Persons with schizophrenia experience different metacognitive impairments., The metacognitive training for patients with schizophrenia - young version can be applied to young people affected by psychosis and seems to improve symptomatology, social functioning, cognitive, and metacognitive abilities, independently by their Duration of Untreated Psychosis over a 2-year period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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133. Metabolic syndrome and drug discontinuation in schizophrenia: a randomized trial comparing aripiprazole olanzapine and haloperidol.
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Parabiaghi, A., Tettamanti, M., D'Avanzo, B., Barbato, A., Aguglia, Eugenio, Bassi, Mariano, Breviario, Giancarlo, Casacchia, Massimo, Colotto, Antonio, Corrivetti, Giulio, Erlicher, Arcadio, Ferrannini, Luigi, Ferrato, Farida, Francomano, Antonio, Marcenaro, Maurizio, Mastroeni, Antonino, Mauri, Massimo C, Percudani, Mauro, Picci, Rocco, and Pioli, Rosaria
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- *
METABOLIC syndrome treatment , *SCHIZOPHRENIA treatment , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *ARIPIPRAZOLE , *OLANZAPINE , *HALOPERIDOL - Abstract
Objective To determine whether the prescription of aripiprazole, compared with olanzapine and haloperidol, was associated with a lower frequency of metabolic syndrome ( MS) and treatment discontinuation at 1 year. Method Patients were randomly assigned to be treated open-label and according to usual clinical practice with either aripiprazole, olanzapine, or haloperidol and followed up for 1 year. Results Three hundred out-patients with persistent schizophrenia were recruited in 35 mental health services. The intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis found no significant differences in the rate of MS between aripiprazole (37%), olanzapine (47%), and haloperidol (42%). Treatment discontinuation for any cause was higher for aripiprazole (52%) than for olanzapine (33%; OR, 0.41; P = 0.004), or haloperidol (37%; OR, 0.51; P = 0.030). No significant difference was found between olanzapine and haloperidol. Time to discontinuation for any cause was longer for olanzapine than for aripiprazole ( HR, 0.55; P < 0.001). No significant differences were found between haloperidol and aripiprazole, or between olanzapine and haloperidol. Conclusion The prescription of aripiprazole did not significantly reduce the rates of MS, but its treatment retention was worse. Aripiprazole cannot be considered the safest and most effective drug for maintenance treatment of schizophrenia in routine care, although it may have a place in antipsychotic therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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134. Is Personal Recovery in Schizophrenia Predicted by Low Cognitive Insight?
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Giusti, Laura, Ussorio, Donatella, Tosone, Adele, Venanzio, Chiara, Bianchini, Valeria, Necozione, Stefano, Casacchia, Massimo, and Roncone, Rita
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- *
CONVALESCENCE , *STATISTICAL correlation , *INTERVIEWING , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *SOCIAL skills , *STATISTICS , *DATA analysis , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *PREDICTIVE tests , *INTER-observer reliability , *DATA analysis software , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Recovery is a widely discussed concept in the field of research, treatment, and public policy regarding serious mental illness, and mainly schizophrenia. Aim of our study was to assess the relationship between personal recovery and prediction variables, as psychopathology, neurocognition, clinical and cognitive insight, and social functioning in inpatients affected by schizophrenia, with a special interest on cognitive insight. We assessed 76 inpatients affected by schizophrenia at their hospital discharge. Instruments included the Beck Cognitive Insight Scale, the Insight Scale and the Recovery Assessment Scale to assess the cognitive and clinical insight, and personal recovery. The neurocognitive assessment was represented by a single factor score produced by a principal components analysis of a neurocognitive test battery. Social functioning was measured also. Low self-reflectiveness of cognitive insight represented the best predictors of personal recovery. The relationship between cognitive insight and recovery found in this study may contribute to develop tailored interventions, taking into account the personal sense of recovery, despite the psychopathological evaluation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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135. Prosody recognition and audiovisual emotion matching in schizophrenia: The contribution of cognition and psychopathology
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Castagna, Filomena, Montemagni, Cristiana, Maria Milani, Anna, Rocca, Giuseppe, Rocca, Paola, Casacchia, Massimo, and Bogetto, Filippo
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- *
VERSIFICATION , *RECOGNITION (Psychology) , *EMOTIONS , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *COGNITION , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
Abstract: This study aimed to evaluate the ability to decode emotion in the auditory and audiovisual modality in a group of patients with schizophrenia, and to explore the role of cognition and psychopathology in affecting these emotion recognition abilities. Ninety-four outpatients in a stable phase and 51 healthy subjects were recruited. Patients were assessed through a psychiatric evaluation and a wide neuropsychological battery. All subjects completed the Comprehensive Affect Testing System (CATS), a group of computerized tests designed to evaluate emotion perception abilities. With respect to the controls, patients were not impaired in the CATS tasks involving discrimination of nonemotional prosody, naming of emotional stimuli expressed by voice and judging the emotional content of a sentence, whereas they showed a specific impairment in decoding emotion in a conflicting auditory condition and in the multichannel modality. Prosody impairment was affected by executive functions, attention and negative symptoms, while deficit in multisensory emotion recognition was affected by executive functions and negative symptoms. These emotion recognition deficits, rather than being associated purely with emotion perception disturbances in schizophrenia, are affected by core symptoms of the illness. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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136. Naturalistic study on long term use of Quetiapine as monotherapy in Bipolar mania and mixed episodes.
- Author
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Pollice, Rocco, Tomassini, Annarita, Di Giovambattista, Emanuela, Verni, Laura, Roncone, Rita, and Casacchia, Massimo
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- *
BIPOLAR disorder , *ANTIPSYCHOTIC agents , *MANIA , *MENTAL health , *SYMPTOMS , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *MENTAL illness - Abstract
Introduction The therapeutic approach of bipolar disorders is commonly based on polipharmacotherapy. Lithium and atypical antipsychotics (AA) have been used as standard treatment for therapy and prevention of paroxysmal episodes but a full coverage of responsiveness has not been succeded. Quetiapine, known as AA, was recently approved in the US for use in bipolar depression, in addition to its previously approved indications of mania associated with bipolar I disorder and schizophrenia. Aim: To assess the effectiveness and safety of quetiapine as monotherapy in the treatment of manic or mixed episodes in resistant patients to previous mood stabilizers or/and antipsychotic medications. Methods: Twenty-two young patients with a DSM IV diagnosis of Bipolar I and Bipolar II disorder in current manic or mixed episode were enrolled in the study. They were switched to quetiapine alone from multidrug scheme not adequately controlling the symptoms. Clinical evaluation was done at baseline, 8 and 32 weeks with the Young Mania Rating Scale (Y-MRS) , the Clinical Global Impression Scale (CGI) and the Krawiecka Manchester Rating Scale (KMRS) . Results: Significant improvement in KMRS, YMRS, CGI scores was seen (p < 0,001) . No adjunctive therapy was necessary to control psycho-behavioral symptoms. Conclusion: This study found that treatment-resistant patients with manic or mixed episode could be safely and effectively switched to quetiapine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
137. 'I Can't Get No Satisfaction'… Experience in the treatment, satisfaction, and professional support of young depressed people using SPARX.
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Del Vecchio S, Mammarella S, Giusti L, Casacchia M, and Roncone R
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- Humans, Adolescent, Young Adult, Female, Male, Treatment Outcome, Patient Satisfaction, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Depression therapy
- Abstract
Aim: Depression in young people is common and can lead to poor long-term outcomes. Digital therapies are a promising means of promoting access to care. Currently, among the digital treatments for depression in adolescents recognized by the NICE guidelines, there is SPARX (Smart, Positive, Active, Realistic, X-factor), based on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, CBT. This narrative review aimed to evaluate: 1) Who were the depressed young people who used SPARX and what was their experience with the treatment? 2) Were users satisfied with the SPARX treatment? Did the youth's perceived level of satisfaction with using SPARX impact completion rates? 3) What was the role of professionals (researchers, consultants, teachers) in the SPARX studies? Has their support in running SPARX affected completion rates?, Methods: A narrative review of the English literature was performed. The articles were searched in Pubmed, SCOPUS, and Web of Science databases (from 2012 to 2023) with keywords such as 'SPARX,' depression' and 'young adult'., Results: Of 557 papers, 18 were included in our review. The young people who used SPARX were students or adolescents from special help-seeker populations at risk or with mild to moderate depression. The highest satisfaction levels were present in users of primary health services, such as general practice and counseling services. The support of the school counselor and experts in mental health clinicians was instrumental in impacting user satisfaction and completion rates. The personalization of the game in terms of user culture - symbols, language, norms, values, and artifacts; the customization of the avatar, the gender identity; the narrative structure; the presence of a guide character (virtual therapist); the CBT homework seemed to represent crucial SPARX characteristics related to satisfaction and completion rates., Discussion and Conclusions: Our narrative review provides an overview of the main results of using SPARX with interesting considerations that may suggest improvements for broader use and diffusion of this digital treatment.
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- 2024
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138. Deepening Depression in Women Balancing Work-Life Responsibilities and Caregiving during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Findings from Gender-Specific Face-to-Face Street Interviews Conducted in Italy.
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Giusti L, Mammarella S, Del Vecchio S, Salza A, Casacchia M, and Roncone R
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Purpose: This study investigated the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health, quality of life, and family functioning in a sample of the general female population, exploring difficulties encountered in managing family and work responsibilities and burden of care when taking care of a loved one. This study was, moreover, aimed at investigating factors capable of influencing severe depressive symptomatology in the context of socio-demographics, traumatic events, individual vulnerability, and family functioning., Method: The sampling method used in this research was non-probability sampling. The survey took place during a Hospital Open Weekend (8-10 October 2021) organized by the National Gender Observatory on Women's Health "Fondazione Onda" on the occasion of the World Mental Health Day., Results: A total of 211 women were interviewed (mean age = 35.6, 53% living alone, more than 15% with financial difficulties, 47% exposed to the 2009 L'Aquila earthquake). More than 50% of the sample reported a higher complexity in managing their lives during the COVID-19 pandemic compared to their previous routine, with no statistically significant differences between working women and non-workers, although the latter obtained higher scores for depressive symptomatology and poorer quality of life. Compared to non-caregivers, female caregivers (22.3%) in charge of the care of loved ones affected by physical (10.9%) or psychiatric disabilities (11.4%) complained of a poorer quality of life, especially in general health perception ( p = 0.002), physical function ( p = 0.011), role limitations related to physical problems ( p = 0.017), bodily pain ( p = 0.015), mental health ( p = 0.004), and social functioning ( p = 0.007). Women caring for people affected by mental disorders seemed to experience a more significant worsening in vitality ( p = 0.003) and social functioning ( p = 0.005). Approximately 20% of the total sample reported severe depressive symptomatology. Previous access to mental health services (O.R. 10.923; p = 0.000), a low level of education (O.R. 5.410; p = 0.021), and difficulties in management of everyday lives during the COVID-19 pandemic (O.R. 3.598; p = 0.045) were found to be the main variables predictive of severe depressive psychopathology. Old age, good problem-solving skills, and ability to pursue personal goals were identified as protective factors., Conclusions: The COVID-19 pandemic underlined the need for support amongst emotionally vulnerable women with pre-existing mental health conditions, partly reflecting the cumulative effects of traumas.
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- 2023
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139. Family functioning and personal growth in Italian caregivers living with a family member affected by schizophrenia: Results of an add-on study of the Italian network for research on psychoses.
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Roncone R, Giusti L, Bianchini V, Casacchia M, Carpiniello B, Aguglia E, Altamura M, Barlati S, Bellomo A, Bucci P, Cascino G, Concerto C, Fagiolini A, Marchesi C, Monteleone AM, Pinna F, Siracusano A, and Galderisi S
- Abstract
To date, the role of family members in caring for relatives affected by schizophrenia has focused largely on the negative aspects of impact of the illness. The present study aimed to: (1) assess family functioning and burden of care in caregivers living in Northern, Central, and Southern Italy who looked after subjects affected by chronic schizophrenia; (2) evaluate the relationship between aspects of family functioning and burden of care, in particular personal growth (PG) of caregivers; and (3) identify variables capable of affecting PG of caregivers. A total of 136 caregivers (mean length of illness of family member more than 20 years) were recruited from 9 Italian research sites and evaluated in terms of "positive" family functioning-problem-solving, communication skills and personal goals Family Functioning Questionnaire (FFQ), burden of care, and PG Family Problems Questionnaire (FPQ). Caregivers reported an overall good family functioning with a relatively low objective and subjective burden of care. The latter was positively correlated with length of illness, with women showing a higher subjective burden than men. Reduced problem-solving skills and ability of each family member to pursue personal goals were both associated with reduced objective and subjective burden which, conversely, were both increased by inadequate support and scarce positive comments from relatives and friends. Approximately 50% of caregivers stated that "they had learned something positive from the situation," highlighting a statistically higher proportion of caregivers in southern Italy than in northern and central Italy. Caregivers' PG was associated with good family functioning, adequate professional support, and positive comments. PG also seemed to be positively influenced by support from relatives and friends (O.R. 14.306). The numerous challenges and positive aspects associated with caregiving should be duly acknowledged by mental health services and integrated into routine clinical assessment and intervention framework., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The reviewer MB declared a past collaboration with the authors BC and FP to the handling editor., (Copyright © 2023 Roncone, Giusti, Bianchini, Casacchia, Carpiniello, Aguglia, Altamura, Barlati, Bellomo, Bucci, Cascino, Concerto, Fagiolini, Marchesi, Monteleone, Pinna, Siracusano and Galderisi.)
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- 2023
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140. Twelve-month outcomes in overweight/obese users with mental disorders following a multi-element treatment including diet, physical activity, and positive thinking: The real-world "An Apple a Day" controlled trial.
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Giusti L, Bianchini V, Aggio A, Mammarella S, Salza A, Necozione S, Alunno A, Ferri C, Casacchia M, and Roncone R
- Abstract
The present study aimed to evaluate the 12-month effectiveness of a real-world weight loss transdiagnostic intervention in overweight/obese participants affected by mental disorders under psychopharmacological treatment. We conducted a real-world, controlled, pragmatic outpatient trial. We allocated 58 overweight/obese adults under psychopharmacological treatment from a mental health outpatient unit and 48 overweight/obese adults from a cardiovascular prevention outpatient unit, and assigned them to an intervention or treatment usual as condition (TAU) enriched by life-style advice. Participants in both intervention groups took part in a diet programme (the modified OMNIHeart dietary protocol) and monitoring of regular aerobic activity. A brief group programme ("An Apple a Day" Metacognitive Training, Apple-MCT) was added in the intervention group of participants affected by mental disorders. The primary outcome was weight loss. Secondary outcomes included anthropometric, clinical, and metabolic variables. Psychopathology and health-related quality of life were also evaluated in the psychiatric sample. At 12 months, both intervention groups showed a more marked mean decrease in weight (6.7 kg, SD: 3.57) than the TAU group (0.32 kg, SD: 1.96), and a statistically significant improvement in metabolic variables compared with the control groups. Furthermore, the participants affected by mental disorders included in the intervention group reported improved health-related quality of life. Our findings suggest the need to implement integrated interventions based on a dietary protocol, physical activity, and modification of cognitive style in overweight/obese users with mental disorders., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Giusti, Bianchini, Aggio, Mammarella, Salza, Necozione, Alunno, Ferri, Casacchia and Roncone.)
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- 2022
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141. Easier Said Than Done: The Challenge to Teach "Personal Recovery" to Mental Health Professionals Through a Short, Targeted and Structured Training Programme.
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Giusti L, Ussorio D, Salza A, Casacchia M, and Roncone R
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- Attitude of Health Personnel, Health Personnel education, Humans, Mental Health, Mental Disorders psychology, Mental Health Services, Psychiatric Rehabilitation
- Abstract
This study assesses the effectiveness of our short Personal Recovery Training Program (PRTP) for mental health professionals. Fifty-two healthcare professionals from Italian mental health services and forty students in psychiatric rehabilitation completed the Recovery Knowledge Inventory (RKI) pre- and post-training, divided into two groups: the PRTP (N = 45) and the Family Psychoeducational Training Program (FPTP; N = 47). Participants' understanding of personal recovery improved more significantly for those in the PRTP than for those in the FPTP group in two domains, "Roles and responsibilities" and "Non-linearity of the recovery process"; the FPTP group showed a significant improvement in the "Role of self-definition and peers in recovery" domain. Two consumers were involved in the PRTP and represented a resource to help participants understand the personal recovery process. Our findings indicate that a brief PRTP supported by consumers can improve staff and students' recovery orientation. The translation of the training into clinical practice remains unevaluated., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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142. Predictors of academic performance during the covid-19 outbreak: impact of distance education on mental health, social cognition and memory abilities in an Italian university student sample.
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Giusti L, Mammarella S, Salza A, Del Vecchio S, Ussorio D, Casacchia M, and Roncone R
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- Adult, Anxiety, Communicable Disease Control, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression epidemiology, Disease Outbreaks, Female, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Male, Mental Health, SARS-CoV-2, Social Cognition, Students, Universities, Young Adult, Academic Performance, COVID-19, Education, Distance
- Abstract
Background: This study aimed to investigate the impact of distance education (DE) on mental health, social cognition, and memory abilities in a sample of university students during the national COVID-19 lockdown in Italy and to identify the predictors of academic performance., Methods: Two hundred and three students (76.4% women, mean age 24.3, SD ± 4.9) responded to an anonymous online cross-sectional survey between July 15 and September 30, 2020, on DE experience and cognitive and social-cognitive variables. A short version of the Beck Depression Inventory-II, ten images from the Eyes Task, and five memory vignette stimuli were included in the survey. Descriptive, one-way ANOVA, correlation, and logistic regression analyses were conducted., Results: Half of the student sample reported significant impairment in concentration and learning abilities during DE. Regarding psychological health, 19.7%, 27.1%, and 23.6% of the sample reported mild, moderate, and severe depressive symptoms, respectively. Correlation analyses showed a statistically significant negative association between depression and the overall subjective evaluation of DE (r = - 0.359; p < 0.000). Changes in one's study context and habits, i.e., studying alone at one's parents' home instead of studying with colleagues or alone in a university "social place" (e.g., the university library), seemed to increase the likelihood of poor academic performance by almost 3 times (O.R. 3.918; p = 0.032). This predictor was no longer statistically significant in the subsequent step when the individual impairment predictors were entered. Learning concentration impairment during DE (O.R. 8.350; p = 0.014), anxiety about COVID-19 contagion for oneself or others (O.R. 3.363; p = 0.022), female gender (O.R. 3.141; p = 0.045), and depressive symptomatology (O.R. 1.093; p = 0.047) were ultimately determined to be the strongest predictors of poor academic performance, whereas the appreciation of DE represented a protective variable (O.R. 0.610; p < 0.000)., Conclusions: The study showed a negative impact of DE on the mental health of students presenting depressive symptoms and impairment in concentration and learning, the latter identified as the strongest predictors of poor academic performances. The study confirms the emerging need to monitor the impact of DE, which occurred during the 2019/2020 academic year and will continue in the coming months, to refine educational offerings and meet students' psychological needs by implementing psychological interventions based on the modifiable variables that seem to compromise students' psychological well-being and academic outcomes., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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143. "Hang in There!": Mental Health in a Sample of the Italian Civil Protection Volunteers during the COVID-19 Health Emergency.
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Roncone R, Giusti L, Mammarella S, Salza A, Bianchini V, Lombardi A, Prosperococco M, Ursini E, Scaletta V, and Casacchia M
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- Anxiety, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Volunteers, COVID-19, Mental Health
- Abstract
Few studies have been conducted on civil volunteers and their emotional conditions concerning the current COVID-19 pandemic. The present study aimed to evaluate the impact of the COVID-19 emergency on the mental health (general well-being, depression level, and post-traumatic distress), coping strategies, and training needs in an Italian sample of 331 Civil Protection volunteers of the L'Aquila province, during the first nationwide "lockdown" (8 March-3 June 2020). The rate of respondents to the online survey was limited (11.5%), presumably because displaying distress would be considered a sign of "weakness", making volunteers unable to do their jobs. More than 90% of the volunteers showed good mental health conditions and a wide utilization of positive coping strategies, with the less experienced displaying better emotional conditions compared to colleagues with 10 or more years of experience. The type of emergency, the relatively few cases of contagion and mortality in the territory compared to the rest of Italy, and the sense of helping the community, together with the awareness of their group identity, could have contributed to the reported well-being. These results may help to identify the needs of volunteers related to this new "urban" emergency to improve both their technical and emotional skills.
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- 2021
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144. Heart and Head: Profiles and Predictors of Self-Assessed Cognitive and Affective Empathy in a Sample of Medical and Health Professional Students.
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Giusti L, Mammarella S, Salza A, Ussorio D, Bianco D, Casacchia M, and Roncone R
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For medical and health professions, students learning to respond to others' distress with well-regulated empathy is an important developmental skill linked to positive health outcomes and professionalism. Our study aimed to investigate the sociodemographic, psychological, and psychosocial differences between medical (MS) and health professional (HPS) students and their empathic abilities, since both populations share common stressors, namely, dealing with suffering people. Additionally, we were interested in assessing the psychological and psychosocial predictors of empathy of MS compared to HPS. One hundred thirty MS and 86 HPS were administered the Patient Health Questionnaire-9, Interpersonal Reactivity Index, Integrative Hope Scale, and UCLA Loneliness Scale. The two groups showed differences in their contextual characteristics, with the HPS group having larger families, lower parents' education levels, and lower family income compared to the MS group. In both groups, ~15% of students reported previous contact for psychological problems. A higher proportion of HPS (23.3%) reported depressive symptoms than MS (10%), and female HPS reported more intense feelings of loneliness than other subgroups of students. No differences were found between the two groups in self-assessed cognitive and affective empathy. In both groups, women showed greater affective scores than men and, at the same time, seemed to be particularly prone to personal distress. The cognitive empathic dimension of "perspective taking" was predicted by young age (OR, 612; 95% CI, 1.395-15.242) and the overall socioeconomic status (OR, 3.175; 95% CI, 1.154-8.734) of the HPS. Self-assessed affective competence was predicted by female gender (OR, 3.112; 95% CI, 1.328-7.288), depressive symptomatology (OR, 2.777; 95% CI, 1.004-7.681), higher mother's level of education (OR, 2.764; 95% CI, 1.147-6.659), and feeling of hope related to social relationships (OR, 1.367; 95% CI, 1.152-1.622). Risk factors for poor self-assessed affective emphatic skills were previous contact for psychological problems (OR, 3.263; 95% CI, 1.238-8.601) and feelings of loneliness (OR, 1.18; 95% CI, 1.09-1.276). Our findings emphasize the need to test psychosocial models to better understand empathic skills., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Giusti, Mammarella, Salza, Ussorio, Bianco, Casacchia and Roncone.)
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- 2021
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145. Distance education during COVID 19: an Italian survey on the university teachers' perspectives and their emotional conditions.
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Casacchia M, Cifone MG, Giusti L, Fabiani L, Gatto R, Lancia L, Cinque B, Petrucci C, Giannoni M, Ippoliti R, Frattaroli AR, Macchiarelli G, and Roncone R
- Subjects
- Adult, Communicable Disease Control, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Male, Pandemics, Reproducibility of Results, SARS-CoV-2, Universities, COVID-19, Education, Distance
- Abstract
Background: Following the COVID-19 pandemic, distance education (DE) replaced traditional "face-to-face" teaching and has become the main method of teaching. The aim of this study was to 1) evaluate the impact of DE by teachers in our department during the second semester of the 2019-20 academic year following the March-May 2020 Italian national lockdown and 2) evaluate the relationship between DE and the emotional well-being of teachers during the period of home confinement., Methods: Ninety-seven university teachers (51.5% women; most represented age group 60-69 years range, 40.2%) responded to an anonymous online cross-sectional survey between July 15 - September 30, 2020, on the advantages and disadvantages of DE, developed by one online teacher focus group. The emotional conditions were assessed by a short version of the Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II). The internal consistency reliability survey and the 10-item BDI-II were measured by Cronbach's alpha. A correlation analysis (r-Pearson) was conducted between the overall evaluation of the experience of DE and the variables included in the study., Results: Teachers reported difficulties in technical aspects, and in psychological factors, as the discomfort of "speaking in the void" (64.7%). The absence of "face-to-face" eye contact with the students was complained by 81% of teachers. Significant impairments in sleep patterns and loss of energy were reported, with female teachers having greater difficulty concentrating than their male colleagues. A quarter of teachers showed depressive symptoms of varying severity. The most satisfied teachers were those most stimulated by DE (r = 0.752, p < 0.000), who showed a lower impact of depressive symptoms (r = - 0.289, p = 0.005). The teaching load in hours influenced the perception of disadvantages (r = 0.214, p = 0.035) and contributed to a lower appreciation of the challenges of DE. The more significant the manifestation of depressive symptoms during the lockdown was, the greater the subjective recovery of a good emotional condition once the domestic confinement was over (r = 0.344, p = 0.001), despite maintaining DE., Conclusions: Our study highlights the impact of technical, didactic, and psychological difficulties of DE, reported by our teachers. The appreciation of their new learning promoted by DE seemed related to better emotional well-being of university teachers accepting this "challenge" in their important role in the high-education system, influencing good learning and promoting students' professional success.
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- 2021
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146. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) anxiety management and reasoning bias modification in young adults with anxiety disorders: A real-world study of a therapist-assisted computerized (TACCBT) program Vs. "person-to-person" group CBT.
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Salza A, Giusti L, Ussorio D, Casacchia M, and Roncone R
- Abstract
Computerized cognitive behavioral therapy (cCBT) appears to be a therapeutic strategy that is as effective as person-to-person CBT in the treatment of adults and young people with anxiety disorders. The aim of our controlled study was to evaluate the following in young adult users affected by anxiety disorders: (1) the feasibility of our simple "prototype" of a therapist-assisted computerized cognitive behavioral therapy (TacCBT); and (2) the effectiveness of two different interventions-group CBT and TacCBT-in an "enriched" format for anxiety management and reasoning bias modification as compared to a control group. Psychopathology, global functioning, and cognitive flexibility were examined in 13 users undergoing TacCBT and compared to those receiving "person-to-person" group CBT (CBT Group, n = 25), which controlled for their psychopharmacological treatment. Users were included in the arms of our real-word study on the basis of their treatment preferences. Twelve subjects were included in a Treatment as Usual (TAU) group. Following the intervention, all groups showed a significant improvement in symptoms. Both CBT groups showed an improvement in cognitive flexibility with respect to TAU, in addition to a reduction of their reasoning overconfidence. Our preliminary results show the benefits of the TacCBT program and highlight its advantages., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflict of interest., (© 2020 The Authors.)
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- 2020
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147. [Closing forensic psychiatric hospitals in Italy: a new deal for mental health care?].
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Casacchia M, Malavolta M, Bianchini V, Giusti L, Di Michele V, Giosuè P, Ruggeri M, Biondi M, and Roncone R
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- Criminal Law legislation & jurisprudence, Criminals, Dangerous Behavior, Health Policy, Humans, Italy, Mental Health legislation & jurisprudence, Forensic Psychiatry legislation & jurisprudence, Health Care Reform legislation & jurisprudence, Health Facility Closure legislation & jurisprudence, Hospitals, Psychiatric legislation & jurisprudence, Mental Competency legislation & jurisprudence, Mental Disorders therapy
- Abstract
The date of March 31, 2015, following the Law 81/2014, has marked a historical transition with the final closure of the six forensic psychiatric hospitals in Italy. This law identifies a new pathway of care that involves small-scale high therapeutic profile facilities (Residenze per la Esecuzione della Misura di Sicurezza, REMS) instead of the old forensic psychiatric hospitals. The Law promotes a new recovery-oriented rehabilitation approach for the persons with mental disorders who committed a criminal offence, but lack criminal responsibility and deemed as socially dangerous. After a brief description of what happens abroad, this article highlights the positive aspects of the law that, as a whole, has to be considered innovative and unavoidable. The main debated problems are also reviewed, including the lack of changes to the Criminal Code; the improper equation between insanity and mental illness and social dangerousness; the evaluation of "socially dangerousness", based solely on "subjective qualities" of the person, assessed out of his/her context, without paying attention to family and social conditions suitable for discharge; the expensive implementation of the REMS, mainly based on security policies and less on care and rehabilitation, the delay in their construction, and the search for residential alternatives structures; the uncertain boundaries of professional responsibility. Finally, several actions are suggested that can support the implementation of the law: information programs addressed to the general population; training activities for mental health professionals; systematic monitoring and evaluation of the outcomes of the care provided to the forensic psychiatric population; implementation of Agreement Protocols and a better cooperation with the judiciary. Scientific societies dealing with psychosocial rehabilitation need to be involved in such issues relating to the identification of the best care and rehabilitation pathways, which should be implemented following closure of forensic psychiatric hospitals.
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- 2015
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148. [The onset of affective disorder: impact of duration of untreated psychosis on global functioning].
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Bianchini V, Giusti L, Malavolta M, Ussorio D, Cifone MG, Fabiani L, Casacchia M, Roncone R, and Pollice R
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- Adult, Early Diagnosis, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hospitals, Psychiatric, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Male, Mood Disorders epidemiology, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Psychotic Disorders diagnosis, Psychotic Disorders therapy, Risk Factors, Substance-Related Disorders therapy, Treatment Outcome, Mood Disorders diagnosis, Mood Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Aim: Observational study on a young sample at the onset of affective disorder seeking help to a dedicated service, with the aim to evaluate the age of onset, the duration of untreated psychosis (DUP), and the functional outcome at 2-year follow-up., Methods: For 57 young people at First Episode Psychosis (FEP) of Affective Disorder, consecutively recruited to SMILE service, were collected socio-demographic and clinical (DUP, psychiatric history, age of onset) data and psychopathological (BPRS e SCL-90), perceived distress (GHQ-12) and functioning (VGF) evaluations., Results: Two years after the access to SMILE service, the sample showed a functional improvement, with a duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) of 120,9 weeks and a mean age of onset of 21 years. More than 50% of the sample reported a family psychiatric history; this subgroup showed a higher substance use and a longer DUP compared to young people with a negative family psychiatric history., Discussion and Conclusions: This study confirms the problem of the diagnostic delay of young people at FEP of Affective Disorder and underlines the role of family psychiatric history. Our results support the need of a specialized service to improve the early detection, identification and treatment of mental disorders.
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- 2015
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149. Persistent fear of aftershocks, impairment of working memory, and acute stress disorder predict post-traumatic stress disorder: 6-month follow-up of help seekers following the L'Aquila earthquake.
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Roncone R, Giusti L, Mazza M, Bianchini V, Ussorio D, Pollice R, and Casacchia M
- Abstract
The aim of our 6-month follow-up study was to assess predictors of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among individuals seeking treatment at the General Hospital Psychiatric Unit within the first month following the L'Aquila earthquake. Clinical, trauma-related and neurocognitive variables were considered. At the 6-month follow-up, 91 (74.5%) out of 122 subjects were re-assessed and administered the Impact of Events Scale-revised (IES-R) for the detection of PTSD according to DSM-IV criteria. Within 4 weeks following the earthquake, patients were assessed with a checklist of traumatic-event-related variables, along with the Stanford Acute Stress Disorder Questionnaire (SASDQ) for the detection of ASD, with a short battery on working (Wechler Memory Scale-R, Digit Forward and Backward) and verbal memory (subtest of Milan Overall Dementia Assessment, MODA). A statistically significant higher proportion of subjects affected by 'partial' ASD showed a PTSD diagnosis (80.6%, N = 29) compared to not diagnosed subjects (40%, N = 22) and a PTSD diagnosis was shown by all the 4 subjects (4.4%) affected by 'full' ASD at the entry in the study. At the 6-month follow-up 56% of the sample could be considered affected by PTSD on the IES-R scale. The results of the logistic regression analysis on our selected predictors indicated that the persistent fear of aftershocks seemed to increase by over 57 times the likelihood of positive estimate of PTSD, followed by impairment of working memory backward (OR 48.2), and having being diagnosed as ASD case in the first 4 week after the earthquake (OR 17.4). This study underlines the importance of identifying PTSD predictors, in order to planning early treatment interventions after natural disasters.
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- 2013
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150. Dysfunctional neural networks associated with impaired social interactions in early psychosis: an ICA analysis.
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Mazza M, Catalucci A, Pino MC, Giusti L, Nigri A, Pollice R, Roncone R, Casacchia M, and Gallucci M
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- Adult, Brain Mapping methods, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Female, Humans, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted methods, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Principal Component Analysis, Psychotic Disorders complications, Social Behavior Disorders complications, Brain physiopathology, Emotions, Nerve Net physiopathology, Photic Stimulation methods, Psychotic Disorders physiopathology, Social Behavior, Social Behavior Disorders physiopathology
- Abstract
The "default mode", or baseline of brain function is a topic of great interest in schizophrenia research. Recent neuroimaging studies report that the symptoms of chronic schizophrenia subjects are associated with temporal frequency alterations as well as with the disruption of local spatial patterns in the default mode network (DMN). Previous studies both on chronic and medicated subjects with psychosis suffered from limitations; on this basis, it was hypothesized that the default mode network showed abnormal activation and connectivity in young and neuroleptic-naïve patients with first-episode psychosis. This study investigated emotional responses to pleasant and unpleasant/disgusting visual stimuli by a resting-state analysis of fMRI-data from 12 untreated first-episode psychosis patients with prevalently negative symptomatology versus 12 healthy subjects. We chose this experimental task to explore the functional link between default mode network and hedonic processing which has been proposed as a marker of cerebral dysfunction in psychotic disorder and implicated in its pathophysiology. Independent Component Analysis (ICA) was used to identify the default mode component. Both healthy and first-episode subjects showed significant spatial differences in the default mode network. In first-episode subjects, medial frontal hypoactivity and cerebellar hyperactivity were correlated with the severity of negative symptoms.
- Published
- 2013
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