50 results on '"Scaccabarozzi G."'
Search Results
2. Predicting 60-Day Mortality in a Home-Care Service: Development of a New Inter-RAI 49-Frailty Index in Patients with Chronic Disease and without a Cancer Diagnosis
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Morandi, A, Zambon, A, Crippa, M, Re, M, Riva, L, Lombardi, F, Mazzola, P, Scaccabarozzi, G, Bellelli, G, Morandi A., Zambon A., Crippa M., Re M., Riva L., Lombardi F., Mazzola P., Scaccabarozzi G., Bellelli G., Morandi, A, Zambon, A, Crippa, M, Re, M, Riva, L, Lombardi, F, Mazzola, P, Scaccabarozzi, G, Bellelli, G, Morandi A., Zambon A., Crippa M., Re M., Riva L., Lombardi F., Mazzola P., Scaccabarozzi G., and Bellelli G.
- Abstract
Objective: Frailty Index (FI) is used to define the level of frailty in various clinical settings. Fifteen- and 26-item FIs have been demonstrated to predict 1-year mortality and intensity of care in home care (HC) and palliative home care (PHC). The objective of this study was to develop a new FI to predict the 60-day risk of death or transition to a PHC service after the initiation of an HC service in patients with chronic disease and without a cancer diagnosis. Design: Retrospective cohort study. Setting and Participants: Patients 18 years and older followed in an HC service of a “Frailty Department-Local Palliative Care Network” from January 1, 2017, to October 31, 2021. Methods: A 49-item FI (FI-49) was developed selecting variables within the standardized international Residential Assessment Instrument assessments (interRAI-HC) and compared to existing FIs with 15 and 26 variables. Results: A total of 2099 patients were included in the study with a median age of 80.0 years (IQR: 72.0-86.0) and a predominantly female population (62.4%). Among these patients, 8% died or were transferred to PHC within the 60-day follow-up. The FI-49 demonstrated a higher ability to predict 60-day mortality (C index 0.8165, 95% CI 0.7848-0.8481) compared to the 26- and 15-item FI. An FI-49 cutoff of 0.33 was also selected to provide clinicians with a more practical approach (C-index of 0.7044, 95% CI 0.6796-0.7292). Conclusion and Implication: The FI-49 is a good predictor of short-term mortality or transition to palliative care among older patients referred to an HC service. The automatic calculation of this tool could facilitate more appropriate care planning and the correct allocation of healthcare resources, especially considering the rapid ageing of the population.
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- 2024
3. LCA Towards Sustainable Agriculture: The Case Study of Cupuaçu Jam from Agroforestry
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Recanati, F., Arrigoni, A., Scaccabarozzi, G., Marveggio, D., Melià, P., and Dotelli, G.
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- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Assessing the Costs of Home Palliative Care in Italy: Results for a Demetra Multicentre Study
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Scaccabarozzi, G, Crippa, M, Amodio, E, Pellegrini, G, Scaccabarozzi G., Crippa M., Amodio E., Pellegrini G., Scaccabarozzi, G, Crippa, M, Amodio, E, Pellegrini, G, Scaccabarozzi G., Crippa M., Amodio E., and Pellegrini G.
- Abstract
Background: The sustainability of palliative care services is nowadays crucial inasmuch as resources for palliative care are internationally scarce, the funding environment is competitive, and the potential population is growing. Methods: The DEMETRA study is a multicentre prospective observational study, describing the intensity of care and the related costs of palliative home care pathways. Results: 475 patients were enrolled as recipients of specialized palliative home care. The majority of recipients were cancer patients (89.4%). The mean duration of palliative care pathways was 46.6 days and mean home care intensity coefficient equal to 0.6. The average daily cost of the model with the reference variables is 96.26 euros. Factors statistically significantly associated with an increase in mean daily costs were greater dependence and extreme frailty (p < 0.05). Otherwise, a longer duration of treatment course was associated with a significant decrease in mean daily costs (p < 0.001). Conclusions: In terms of clinical and organizational management, considering the close association with the intensity and cost of the path, frailty should be systematically assessed by all facilities that potentially refer patients to home palliative care teams, and it should be carefully recorded in a standardized payment rate perspective.
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- 2022
5. Global Meat Consumption Trends and Local Deforestation in Madre de Dios: Assessing Land Use Changes and other Environmental Impacts
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Recanati, F., Allievi, F., Scaccabarozzi, G., Espinosa, T., Dotelli, G., and Saini, M.
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. An estimation of the number of children requiring pediatric palliative care in Italy
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Benini, F, Bellentani, M, Reali, L, Lazzarin, P, De Zen, L, Pellegatta, F, Aprile, P, Scaccabarozzi, G, Benini F., Bellentani M., Reali L., Lazzarin P., De Zen L., Pellegatta F., Aprile P. L., Scaccabarozzi G., Benini, F, Bellentani, M, Reali, L, Lazzarin, P, De Zen, L, Pellegatta, F, Aprile, P, Scaccabarozzi, G, Benini F., Bellentani M., Reali L., Lazzarin P., De Zen L., Pellegatta F., Aprile P. L., and Scaccabarozzi G.
- Abstract
Background: Pediatric palliative care (PPC) addresses the physical and psychological needs of children suffering from life-limiting diseases. To define prevention and educational plans and to properly allocate resources, a precise estimation of the PPC burden is required. Objectives: To estimate the current number of children requiring PPC in Italy, useful to assist policy-makers and healthcare bodies in the organization and allocation of PPC resources. Methods: Literature data, The Global Atlas of Palliative Care at the End of Life and Italian national databases have been consulted. Results: According to our estimation, at present, a total of 20,540–32,864 children in Italy require PPC (34–54 children/100,000 inhabitants) of whom 18 children/100,000 inhabitants require specialized PPC. Conclusions: The present work is a fundamental tool to be used by the institutions, the local networks of PPC and the health programmers when formulating organizational models and care plans consistent with the actual need for PPC.
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- 2021
7. The relationship between practitioners and caregivers during a treatment of palliative care: A grounded theory of a challenging collaborative process
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Rossi, P, Crippa, M, Scaccabarozzi, G, Rossi P., Crippa M., Scaccabarozzi G., Rossi, P, Crippa, M, Scaccabarozzi, G, Rossi P., Crippa M., and Scaccabarozzi G.
- Abstract
The possibility of coming to a “good death” is a challenging issue that crosses ethical and religious beliefs, cultural assumptions, as well as medical expertise. The provision of palliative care for relieving patients’ pain is a practice that reshapes the path to the event of death and gives form to a particular context of awareness, recalling the notion proposed by Glaser and Strauss. This decision redesigns the relationships between patients, practitioners and caregivers and introduces a new pattern of collaboration between them. Our study focuses on the implications of the collaboration between practitioners and caregivers, starting from the assumption that the latter may provide support to their loved ones and to the practitioners, but need to be supported too. We provide a qualitative analysis of this collaboration based on an empirical research that took place in four different settings of provision of palliative care, reporting the contrast between the affective engagement of caregivers and the professional approach of practitioners. We claim that this ambivalent collaboration, while embedded in contingent and incommensurable experiences, brings to the fore the broader understanding of the path to a “good death,” outlining its societal representation as a collective challenge.
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- 2021
8. Impact of palliative care in evaluating and relieving symptoms in patients with advanced cancer. Results from the demetra study
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Corli, O, Pellegrini, G, Bosetti, C, Riva, L, Crippa, M, Amodio, E, Scaccabarozzi, G, Corli O., Pellegrini G., Bosetti C., Riva L., Crippa M., Amodio E., Scaccabarozzi G., Corli, O, Pellegrini, G, Bosetti, C, Riva, L, Crippa, M, Amodio, E, Scaccabarozzi, G, Corli O., Pellegrini G., Bosetti C., Riva L., Crippa M., Amodio E., and Scaccabarozzi G.
- Abstract
Background: Cancer patients experience multiple symptoms throughout the course of the disease. We aimed to provide a comprehensive analysis of the symptom burden in patients with advanced cancer at admission to specialist palliative care (PC) services and seven days later to estimate the immediate impact of PC intervention. Patient and methods: The analysis was based on an observational, prospective, multicenter study (named DEMETRA) conducted in Italy on new patients accessing network specialist PC centers during the period May 2017–November 2017. The prevalence and intensity of symptoms were assessed at baseline and after seven days using three tools including the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS). Results: Five PC centers recruited 865 cancer patients. Thirty-three different symptoms were observed at the baseline, the most frequent being asthenia (84.9%) and poor well-being (71%). The intensity of the most frequent symptoms according to ESAS ranged from 5.5 for asthenia to 3.9 for nausea. The presence and intensity of physical symptoms increased with increasing levels of anxiety and depression. After seven days, prevalence of nausea and breathlessness as well as intensity of almost all symptoms significantly decreased. Conclusions: The study confirmed the considerable symptom burden of patients with advanced cancer. PC intervention has significantly reduced the severity of symptoms, despite the patients’ advanced disease and short survival.
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- 2020
9. COVID-19 emergency and palliative medicine: An intervention model'
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Riva, L, Caraceni, A, Vigorita, F, Berti, J, Martinelli, M, Crippa, M, Pellegrini, G, Scaccabarozzi, G, Riva L., Caraceni A., Vigorita F., Berti J., Martinelli M. P., Crippa M., Pellegrini G., Scaccabarozzi G., Riva, L, Caraceni, A, Vigorita, F, Berti, J, Martinelli, M, Crippa, M, Pellegrini, G, Scaccabarozzi, G, Riva L., Caraceni A., Vigorita F., Berti J., Martinelli M. P., Crippa M., Pellegrini G., and Scaccabarozzi G.
- Abstract
Objectives: The aim of this work is to describe the multidisciplinary model of intervention applied and the characteristics of some COVID-19 patients assisted by the hospital palliative care unit (UCP-H) of an Italian hospital in Lombardy, the Italian region most affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: A retrospective study was conducted on patients admitted to the A. Manzoni Hospital (Lecco, Lombardy Region, Italy) and referred to the UCP-H between 11 March 2020 and 18 April 2020, the period of maximum spread of COVID-19 in this area. Data were collected on the type of hospitalisation, triage process, modality of palliative care and psychological support provided. Results: 146 COVID-10 patients were referred to the UCP-H. Of these, 120 died during the observation time (82%) while 15 (10.2%) improved and were discharged from the UCP-H care. 93 had less favourable characteristics (rapid deterioration of respiratory function, old age, multiple comorbidities) and an intensive clinical approach was considered contraindicated, while 48 patients had more favourable presentations. Mean follow-up was 4.8 days. A mean of 4.3 assessments per patient were performed. As to respiratory support, 94 patients were treated with oxygen only (at different volumes) and 45 with Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP). Conclusion: The ongoing pandemic highlighted the need for dedicated palliative care teams and units for dying patients. This work highlights how palliative medicine specialist can make a fundamental contribution thanks to their ability and work experience in an organised multiprofessional context.
- Published
- 2020
10. Predicting care intensity in geriatric home care patients: a comparison of different measures
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Scaccabarozzi, G, Palmer, K, Onder, G, Pellegrini, G, Crippa, M, Colombo, C, Lombardi, F, Beretta, G, Bernabei, R, Scaccabarozzi G., Palmer K., Onder G., Pellegrini G., Crippa M., Colombo C. O., Lombardi F., Beretta G., Bernabei R., Scaccabarozzi, G, Palmer, K, Onder, G, Pellegrini, G, Crippa, M, Colombo, C, Lombardi, F, Beretta, G, Bernabei, R, Scaccabarozzi G., Palmer K., Onder G., Pellegrini G., Crippa M., Colombo C. O., Lombardi F., Beretta G., and Bernabei R.
- Abstract
Background: Dependency in older ages is increasing. Many older persons receive care while living in the community. We aimed to identify the predictive value of four clinical measurements to predict home care intensity in older patients following discharge from hospital to home care over 90 days. Methods: We included 425 inpatients from the “Frailty Department–Local Palliative Care Network” of the local social health authority (ASST) Lecco, Italy (mean age 75.4 years, SD 14.5; female 75.5%). Changes in Health, End-stage disease, and Signs and Symptoms, light version (CHESS-Lite), activities of daily living (ADL), frailty, and the Service Urgency Algorithm. Receiver operative curves were used to calculate the area under the curve (AUC) for predicting Home Care Intensity coefficient (ratio of the number of days when any home care was provided 90 days post-discharge). The interRAI Contact Assessment Instrument was used to calculate these measures. Results: Analysis was stratified using six different home care intensity score cut-offs. CHESS-Lite had a higher AUC for predicting home care intensity at all cut-off levels but was best for predicting the highest level of home care intensity (≥ 0.8) where the AUC was 0.71 (0.64–0.79). The frailty index also had an acceptable AUC. ADL had the lowest AUC. Conclusions: Health instability measured with CHESS-Lite has a high predictive value for identifying home care intensity in geriatric patients after discharge from hospital to home, especially in persons with higher home care intensity scores. Geriatric patients with high health instability should be focused on at discharge to prioritize assessment and initiate timely services for home care support.
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- 2020
11. Clinical care conditions and needs of palliative care patients from five italian regions: Preliminary data of the demetra project
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Scaccabarozzi, G, Amodio, E, Riva, L, Corli, O, Maltoni, M, Di Silvestre, G, Turriziani, A, Morino, P, Pellegrini, G, Crippa, M, Scaccabarozzi G., Amodio E., Riva L., Corli O., Maltoni M., Di Silvestre G., Turriziani A., Morino P., Pellegrini G., Crippa M., Scaccabarozzi, G, Amodio, E, Riva, L, Corli, O, Maltoni, M, Di Silvestre, G, Turriziani, A, Morino, P, Pellegrini, G, Crippa, M, Scaccabarozzi G., Amodio E., Riva L., Corli O., Maltoni M., Di Silvestre G., Turriziani A., Morino P., Pellegrini G., and Crippa M.
- Abstract
In order to plan the right palliative care for patients and their families, it is essential to have detailed information about patients’ needs. To gain insight into these needs, we analyzed five Italian local palliative care networks and assessed the clinical care conditions of patients facing the complexities of advanced and chronic disease. A longitudinal, observational, noninterventional study was carried out in five Italian regions from May 2017 to November 2018. Patients who accessed the palliative care networks were monitored for 12 months. Sociodemographic, clinical, and symptom information was collected with several tools, including the Necesidades Paliativas CCOMS-ICO (NECPAL) tool, the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS), and interRAI Palliative Care (interRAI-PC). There were 1013 patients in the study. The majority (51.7%) were recruited at home palliative care units. Cancer was the most frequent diagnosis (85.4%), and most patients had at least one comorbidity (58.8%). Cancer patients reported emotional stress with severe symptoms (38.7% vs. 24.3% in noncancer patients; p = 0.001) and were less likely to have clinical frailty (13.3% vs. 43.9%; p < 0.001). Our study confirms that many patients face the last few months of life with comorbidities or extreme frailty. This study contributes to increasing the general knowledge on palliative care needs in a high-income country.
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- 2020
12. Hospital, local palliative care network and public health: how do they involve terminally ill patients?
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Scaccabarozzi, G, Limonta, F, Amodio, E, Scaccabarozzi G., Limonta F., Amodio E., Scaccabarozzi, G, Limonta, F, Amodio, E, Scaccabarozzi G., Limonta F., and Amodio E.
- Abstract
Background: Over one quarter of the health care expenditures is estimated to be spent for patients in the last year of life (LYL). For these patients, palliative care (PC) has been suggested as a response for improving the standards of care and reducing health costs. The aim of this study was to analyze a cohort of LYL people, in terms of comparing hospitalised patients who had been referred for PC to patients receiving usual care (UC). Methods: Retrospective study carried out on patients resident in Lecco (Italy) who died between 2012 and 2013. Records of patients were obtained from the Death certificate registry and cross-linked with Regional Healthcare Information System, Hospital Discharge Records and Palliative Care Registry. A total of 5830 patients were analyzed. Results: At least one hospitalization was reported by 2586 (44.3%) patients in the last month of life and 3957 (67.9%) patients in the last year of life. A total of 1114 (19.1%) patients were referred to palliative care with median duration of enrollment of 31 days (IQR = 11–69). PC was found to decrease the risk of hospital admission (adj-OR = 0.21; 95% CI = 0.18–0.26) and dying in hospital (adj-OR = 0.03; 95% CI = 0.02–0.04). Conclusions: Patients in the last year of life show a high risk of hospitalization, which represents a substantial component of health-care costs. Our study suggests that home PC consultation could represent an important public health strategy in order to lower hospital costs for LYL patients and reduce the probability of dying in hospital.
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- 2017
13. Monitoring the Italian Home Palliative Care Services
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Scaccabarozzi, G, Lovaglio, P, Limonta, F, Peruselli, C, Bellentani, M, Crippa, M, Scaccabarozzi, Gianlorenzo, Lovaglio, Pietro Giorgio, Limonta, Fabrizio, Peruselli, Carlo, Bellentani, Mariadonata, Crippa, Matteo, Scaccabarozzi, G, Lovaglio, P, Limonta, F, Peruselli, C, Bellentani, M, Crippa, M, Scaccabarozzi, Gianlorenzo, Lovaglio, Pietro Giorgio, Limonta, Fabrizio, Peruselli, Carlo, Bellentani, Mariadonata, and Crippa, Matteo
- Abstract
Background: In Italy, there currently is a lack of reliable and consistent data on home palliative care provided to people near death. Objectives: Monitoring the activities of the Italian Home Palliative Care Services, according to the 2014 national data collection program entitled “Observatory of Best Practices in Palliative Care” and providing process/outcome measures on a subsample (Best Practice Panel), on regulatory standards and on complete/reliable activity data. Design: A data collection web portal using two voluntary internet-based questionnaires in order to retrospectively identify the main care activity data provided within the year 2013 by Home care units. In the Best Practice Panel and International best practices, eligibility and quality measures refer to the national standards of the NL 38/2010. Setting/Subject: Home Palliative Care Services (HPCSs) that provided care from January to December 2013. Results: 118 Home care units were monitored, globally accounting for 40,955 assisted patients within the year 2013 (38,384 cancer patients); 56 (47.5% of 118) were admitted in the Best Practice Panel. Non-cancer (5%) and pediatric (0.4%) patients represented negligible percentages of frail care patients, and a majority of patients died at home (respectively nearly 75% and 80% of cancer and non-cancer patients). Conclusion: The study demonstrated the feasibility of the collection of certified data from Home care services through a web-based system. Only 80% of the facilities met the requirements provided by the Italian NL 38/2010. Moreover, the extension of the palliative care services provided to frail non-cancer and pediatric patients, affected by complex and advanced chronic conditions, is still inadequate in Italy.
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- 2019
14. The 'aRIANNA' Project: An Observational Study on a Model of Early Identification of Patients with Palliative Care Needs through the Integration between Primary Care and Italian Home Palliative Care Units
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Scaccabarozzi, G, Amodio, E, Pellegrini, G, Limonta, F, Lora Aprile, P, Lovaglio, P, Peruselli, C, Crippa, M, Scaccabarozzi, Gianlorenzo, Amodio, Emanuele, Pellegrini, Giacomo, Limonta, Fabrizio, Lora Aprile, Pierangelo, Lovaglio, Pietro Giorgio, Peruselli, Carlo, Crippa, Matteo, Scaccabarozzi, G, Amodio, E, Pellegrini, G, Limonta, F, Lora Aprile, P, Lovaglio, P, Peruselli, C, Crippa, M, Scaccabarozzi, Gianlorenzo, Amodio, Emanuele, Pellegrini, Giacomo, Limonta, Fabrizio, Lora Aprile, Pierangelo, Lovaglio, Pietro Giorgio, Peruselli, Carlo, and Crippa, Matteo
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to illustrate the characteristics of patients with palliative care (PC) needs, early identified by general practitioners (GPS), and to analyze their care process in home PC services. Background: Early identification and service integration are key components to providing quality palliative care (PC) services ensuring the best possible service for patients and their families. However, in Italy, PC is often provided only in the last phase of life and for oncological patients, with a fragmented service. Methods: Multicenter prospective observational study, lasting in total 18 months, implemented in a sample of Italian Home Palliative Care Units (HPCUs), enrolling and monitoring patients with limited life expectancy, early identified by 94 GPS. The study began on March 1, 2014 and ended on August 31, 2015. Results: Nine hundred thirty-seven patients, out of a total pool of 139,071, were identified by GPS as having a low life expectancy and PC needs. Of these, 556 (59.3%) were nononcological patients. The GPS sent 433 patients to the HPCUs for multidimensional assessment, and 328 (75.8%) were placed in the care of both settings (basic or specialist). For all patients included in the study, both oncological and nononcological patients, there was a high rate of death at home, around 70%. Discussion: This study highlights how a model based on early identification, multidimensional evaluation, and integration of services can promote adequate PC, also for noncancer patients, with a population-based approach.
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- 2018
15. Palliative care at home: quality measurement and organizational drivers: evidences from Italy
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Scaccabarozzi, G, Lovaglio, P, Lovaglio, PG, Scaccabarozzi, G, Lovaglio, P, and Lovaglio, PG
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The aim of this paper is to measure the quality level of care provided by Home palliative units delivering specialized care in Italy and to determine their main drivers among process/structure characteristics. Data were collected via e-survey from a sample of 118 Home palliative care units (nearly 40,000 patients cared in 2013), representing 66% of Home palliative care units active in 2013, within an Institutional initiative aimed at monitoring the practices used in palliative care. Respondents were given a list of 38 good practices and were asked to identify those applied in their units on a daily basis. The dichotomous Rasch Model was used to identify a unidimensional construct defining unitsâ quality, such as the propensity to deliver high quality care. Linear and quantile regression models were used to assess the relationship of the Rasch quality scores with unitsâ structural/process characteristics. The results show large differences of quality levels among units and among practices in terms of applicationâs difficulty. The main quality predictors consist in the collaboration with Hospitals/Hospices in the same catchment area, the amount of specialized nurses in the unit and the additional delivery of basic palliative care. These findings demonstrate a hierarchy of the practicesâ difficulty and the principal drivers that may favor future challenges, clearly illustrating a roadmap which maximizes the propensity for successful future implementations
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- 2018
16. Quality assessment of palliative home care in Italy
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Scaccabarozzi, G, Lovaglio, P, Limonta, F, Floriani, M, Pellegrini, G, LOVAGLIO, PIETRO GIORGIO, Pellegrini, G., Scaccabarozzi, G, Lovaglio, P, Limonta, F, Floriani, M, Pellegrini, G, LOVAGLIO, PIETRO GIORGIO, and Pellegrini, G.
- Abstract
Rationale: The complexity of end-of-life care, represented by a large number of units caring for dying patients, of different types of organizations motivates the importance of measure the quality of provided care. Despite the law 38/2010 promulgated to remove the barriers and provide affordable access to palliative care, measurement, and monitoring of processes of home care providers in Italy has not been attempted. Aims and objectives: Using data drawn by an institutional voluntary observatory established in Italy in 2013, collecting home palliative care units caring for people between January and December 2013, we assess the degree to which Italian home palliative care teams endorse a set of standards required by the 38/2010 law and best practices as emerged from the literature. Methods: The evaluation strategy is based on Rasch analysis, allowing to objectively measuring both performances of facilities and quality indicators' difficulty on the same metric, using 14 quality indicators identified by the observatory's steering committee. Results: Globally, 195 home care teams were registered in the observatory reporting globally 40 955 cured patients in 2013 representing 66% of the population of home palliative care units active in Italy in 2013. Rasch analysis identifies 5 indicators ("interview" with caregivers, continuous training provided to medical and nursing staff, provision of specialized multidisciplinary interventions, psychological support to the patient and family, and drug supply at home) easy to endorse by health care providers and 3 problematic indicators (presence of a formally established Local Network of Palliative care in the area of reference, provision of the care for most problematic patient requiring high intensity of the care, and the percentage of cancer patient dying at Home). Conclusions: The lack of Local Network of Palliative care, required by law 38/2010, is, at the present, the main barrier to its application. However, the adopted met
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- 2017
17. Life Cycle Assessment di un Playground: Climbing Structure CS06
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Dotelli, G. and Scaccabarozzi, G.
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- 2016
18. Corrigendum to ‘Global Meat Consumption Trends and Local Deforestation in Madre de Dios: Assessing Land Use Changes and Other Environmental Impacts’: [Procedia Engineering,Volume 118, 2015, Pages 630–638]
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Recanati, F., Allievi, F., Scaccabarozzi, G., Espinosa, T., Dotelli, G., and Saini, M.
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- 2015
- Full Text
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19. Definizione di sistemi remunerativi in home care
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Lovaglio, P, Scaccabarozzi, G, LOVAGLIO, PIETRO GIORGIO, Scaccabarozzi, G., Lovaglio, P, Scaccabarozzi, G, LOVAGLIO, PIETRO GIORGIO, and Scaccabarozzi, G.
- Published
- 2007
20. Definizione di sistemi remunerativi in home care
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LOVAGLIO, PIETRO GIORGIO, Scaccabarozzi, G., Lovaglio, P, and Scaccabarozzi, G
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SECS-S/01 - STATISTICA ,home care, sistemi remunerativi, alberi classificativi - Published
- 2007
21. Caratterizzazione e valorizzazione dei percorsi di cura in Home care: i DRG domiciliari
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Scaccabarozzi, G, Limonta, F, Colombo, C, Locatelli, W., LOVAGLIO, PIETRO GIORGIO, Scaccabarozzi, G, Lovaglio, P, Limonta, F, Colombo, C, and Locatelli, W
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SECS-S/01 - STATISTICA ,DRG, Home care, Classificazione, Classi iso-costo - Published
- 2005
22. Corrigendum to ‘Global Meat Consumption Trends and Local Deforestation in Madre de Dios: Assessing Land Use Changes and Other Environmental Impacts’ [Procedia Engineering,Volume 118, 2015, Pages 630–638]
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Recanati, F., Allievi, F., Scaccabarozzi, G., Espinosa, T., Dotelli, G., and Saini, M.
- Abstract
The authors regret
- Full Text
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23. With EMERGENCY against Ebola in Sierra Leone | Con EMERGENCY contro Ebola in Sierra Leone
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Langer, M., Checcarelli, E., Gottardello, D., Giovanella, E., Monti, G., Rossi, N., Scaccabarozzi, G., Sisillo, E., Turella, M., Tagliabile, P., Valdatta, C., Brogiato, G., Antonio Pesenti, and Portella, G.
24. Impact of Palliative Care in Evaluating and Relieving Symptoms in Patients with Advanced Cancer. Results from the DEMETRA Study
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Cristina Bosetti, Gianlorenzo Scaccabarozzi, Matteo Crippa, Luca Riva, Giacomo Pellegrini, Oscar Corli, Emanuele Amodio, Corli, O, Pellegrini, G, Bosetti, C, Riva, L, Crippa, M, Amodio, E, Scaccabarozzi, G, Corli O., Pellegrini G., Bosetti C., Riva L., Crippa M., Amodio E., and Scaccabarozzi G.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,Nausea ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Symptom ,lcsh:Medicine ,Disease ,Anxiety ,Palliative Care ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Neoplasms ,Medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,palliative care ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Prospective Studie ,Italy ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Neoplasm ,Cancer patient ,symptoms ,Observational study ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,cancer patients ,Human - Abstract
Background: Cancer patients experience multiple symptoms throughout the course of the disease. We aimed to provide a comprehensive analysis of the symptom burden in patients with advanced cancer at admission to specialist palliative care (PC) services and seven days later to estimate the immediate impact of PC intervention. Patient and methods: The analysis was based on an observational, prospective, multicenter study (named DEMETRA) conducted in Italy on new patients accessing network specialist PC centers during the period May 2017&ndash, November 2017. The prevalence and intensity of symptoms were assessed at baseline and after seven days using three tools including the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS). Results: Five PC centers recruited 865 cancer patients. Thirty-three different symptoms were observed at the baseline, the most frequent being asthenia (84.9%) and poor well-being (71%). The intensity of the most frequent symptoms according to ESAS ranged from 5.5 for asthenia to 3.9 for nausea. The presence and intensity of physical symptoms increased with increasing levels of anxiety and depression. After seven days, prevalence of nausea and breathlessness as well as intensity of almost all symptoms significantly decreased. Conclusions: The study confirmed the considerable symptom burden of patients with advanced cancer. PC intervention has significantly reduced the severity of symptoms, despite the patients&rsquo, advanced disease and short survival.
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Clinical Care Conditions and Needs of Palliative Care Patients from Five Italian Regions: Preliminary Data of the DEMETRA Project
- Author
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Emanuele Amodio, Piero Morino, Marco Maltoni, Gianlorenzo Scaccabarozzi, Matteo Crippa, Oscar Corli, Grazia Di Silvestre, Giacomo Pellegrini, Luca Riva, Adriana Turriziani, Scaccabarozzi, G, Amodio, E, Riva, L, Corli, O, Maltoni, M, Di Silvestre, G, Turriziani, A, Morino, P, Pellegrini, G, Crippa, M, Scaccabarozzi G., Amodio E., Riva L., Corli O., Maltoni M., Di Silvestre G., Turriziani A., Morino P., Pellegrini G., and Crippa M.
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,Stre ,Leadership and Management ,lcsh:Medicine ,Network ,Health Informatics ,Symptom assessment ,assessment of healthcare needs ,Article ,stress ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health Information Management ,medicine ,InterRAI palliative care ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Clinical care ,Frail older ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,lcsh:R ,Cancer ,Assessment of healthcare need ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Stress ,Chronic disease ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,Observational study ,Emotional ,business - Abstract
In order to plan the right palliative care for patients and their families, it is essential to have detailed information about patients&rsquo, needs. To gain insight into these needs, we analyzed five Italian local palliative care networks and assessed the clinical care conditions of patients facing the complexities of advanced and chronic disease. A longitudinal, observational, noninterventional study was carried out in five Italian regions from May 2017 to November 2018. Patients who accessed the palliative care networks were monitored for 12 months. Sociodemographic, clinical, and symptom information was collected with several tools, including the Necesidades Paliativas CCOMS-ICO (NECPAL) tool, the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS), and interRAI Palliative Care (interRAI-PC). There were 1013 patients in the study. The majority (51.7%) were recruited at home palliative care units. Cancer was the most frequent diagnosis (85.4%), and most patients had at least one comorbidity (58.8%). Cancer patients reported emotional stress with severe symptoms (38.7% vs. 24.3% in noncancer patients, p = 0.001) and were less likely to have clinical frailty (13.3% vs. 43.9%, p <, 0.001). Our study confirms that many patients face the last few months of life with comorbidities or extreme frailty. This study contributes to increasing the general knowledge on palliative care needs in a high-income country.
- Published
- 2020
26. The Relationship between Practitioners and Caregivers during a Treatment of Palliative Care: A Grounded Theory of a Challenging Collaborative Process
- Author
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Matteo Crippa, Gianlorenzo Scaccabarozzi, Paolo Rossi, Rossi, P, Crippa, M, and Scaccabarozzi, G
- Subjects
Palliative care ,Process (engineering) ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Pain ,Dying proce ,Context (language use) ,Representation (arts) ,good death ,Ambivalence ,Grounded theory ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Empirical research ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Qualitative Research ,caregiver ,palliative care ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,dying process ,Public relations ,Caregivers ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Medicine ,Psychology ,business ,Good death ,grounded theory - Abstract
The possibility of coming to a “good death” is a challenging issue that crosses ethical and religious beliefs, cultural assumptions, as well as medical expertise. The provision of palliative care for relieving patients’ pain is a practice that reshapes the path to the event of death and gives form to a particular context of awareness, recalling the notion proposed by Glaser and Strauss. This decision redesigns the relationships between patients, practitioners and caregivers and introduces a new pattern of collaboration between them. Our study focuses on the implications of the collaboration between practitioners and caregivers, starting from the assumption that the latter may provide support to their loved ones and to the practitioners, but need to be supported too. We provide a qualitative analysis of this collaboration based on an empirical research that took place in four different settings of provision of palliative care, reporting the contrast between the affective engagement of caregivers and the professional approach of practitioners. We claim that this ambivalent collaboration, while embedded in contingent and incommensurable experiences, brings to the fore the broader understanding of the path to a “good death,” outlining its societal representation as a collective challenge.
- Published
- 2021
27. An estimation of the number of children requiring pediatric palliative care in Italy
- Author
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Pierangelo Lora Aprile, Lucia De Zen, Pierina Lazzarin, Mariadonata Bellentani, Laura Reali, Gianlorenzo Scaccabarozzi, Federico Pellegatta, Franca Benini, Benini, F, Bellentani, M, Reali, L, Lazzarin, P, De Zen, L, Pellegatta, F, Aprile, P, and Scaccabarozzi, G
- Subjects
Male ,Palliative care ,genetic structures ,Adolescent ,Epidemiology ,Child Health Services ,Need ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Health care ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Letter to the Editor ,Estimation ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,business.industry ,Maternal and child health ,Palliative Care ,lcsh:RJ1-570 ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,lcsh:Pediatrics ,medicine.disease ,Pediatric palliative care ,body regions ,Work (electrical) ,nervous system ,Italy ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Medical emergency ,business ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
Background Pediatric palliative care (PPC) addresses the physical and psychological needs of children suffering from life-limiting diseases. To define prevention and educational plans and to properly allocate resources, a precise estimation of the PPC burden is required. Objectives To estimate the current number of children requiring PPC in Italy, useful to assist policy-makers and healthcare bodies in the organization and allocation of PPC resources. Methods Literature data, The Global Atlas of Palliative Care at the End of Life and Italian national databases have been consulted. Results According to our estimation, at present, a total of 20,540–32,864 children in Italy require PPC (34–54 children/100,000 inhabitants) of whom 18 children/100,000 inhabitants require specialized PPC. Conclusions The present work is a fundamental tool to be used by the institutions, the local networks of PPC and the health programmers when formulating organizational models and care plans consistent with the actual need for PPC.
- Published
- 2020
28. COVID-19 emergency and palliative medicine: an intervention model'
- Author
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Luca Riva, Gianlorenzo Scaccabarozzi, Matteo Crippa, Maria Pia Martinelli, Jacopo Berti, Giacomo Pellegrini, Augusto Caraceni, Federico Vigorita, Riva, L, Caraceni, A, Vigorita, F, Berti, J, Martinelli, M, Crippa, M, Pellegrini, G, and Scaccabarozzi, G
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Context (language use) ,terminal care ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life (healthcare) ,Medical–Surgical ,medicine ,end of life care ,Respiratory function ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Continuous positive airway pressure ,Oncology(nursing) ,Oncology (nursing) ,business.industry ,bereavement ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Triage ,clinical decision ,Medical–Surgical Nursing ,quality of life ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Emergency medicine ,business ,End-of-life care - Abstract
ObjectivesThe aim of this work is to describe the multidisciplinary model of intervention applied and the characteristics of some COVID-19 patients assisted by the hospital palliative care unit (UCP-H) of an Italian hospital in Lombardy, the Italian region most affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.MethodsA retrospective study was conducted on patients admitted to the A. Manzoni Hospital (Lecco, Lombardy Region, Italy) and referred to the UCP-H between 11 March 2020 and 18 April 2020, the period of maximum spread of COVID-19 in this area. Data were collected on the type of hospitalisation, triage process, modality of palliative care and psychological support provided.Results146 COVID-10 patients were referred to the UCP-H. Of these, 120 died during the observation time (82%) while 15 (10.2%) improved and were discharged from the UCP-H care. 93 had less favourable characteristics (rapid deterioration of respiratory function, old age, multiple comorbidities) and an intensive clinical approach was considered contraindicated, while 48 patients had more favourable presentations. Mean follow-up was 4.8 days. A mean of 4.3 assessments per patient were performed. As to respiratory support, 94 patients were treated with oxygen only (at different volumes) and 45 with Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP).ConclusionThe ongoing pandemic highlighted the need for dedicated palliative care teams and units for dying patients. This work highlights how palliative medicine specialist can make a fundamental contribution thanks to their ability and work experience in an organised multiprofessional context.
- Published
- 2020
29. Predicting care intensity in geriatric home care patients: a comparison of different measures
- Author
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Gianlorenzo Scaccabarozzi, Giorgio Beretta, Giacomo Pellegrini, Katie Palmer, Matteo Crippa, Clara Onorina Colombo, Roberto Bernabei, Fabio Lombardi, Graziano Onder, Scaccabarozzi, G, Palmer, K, Onder, G, Pellegrini, G, Crippa, M, Colombo, C, Lombardi, F, Beretta, G, and Bernabei, R
- Subjects
Male ,Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Activities of daily living ,Palliative care ,Critical Care ,Frail Elderly ,Frailty Index ,Dependency ,Signs and symptoms ,Disease ,InterRAI ,Home care ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Social determinants of health ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Inpatients ,Frailty ,business.industry ,After discharge ,Middle Aged ,Home Care Services ,Patient Discharge ,CHESS-Lite ,Intensity (physics) ,Italy ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Geriatric - Abstract
Background: Dependency in older ages is increasing. Many older persons receive care while living in the community. We aimed to identify the predictive value of four clinical measurements to predict home care intensity in older patients following discharge from hospital to home care over 90days. Methods: We included 425 inpatients from the “Frailty Department–Local Palliative Care Network” of the local social health authority (ASST) Lecco, Italy (mean age 75.4years, SD 14.5; female 75.5%). Changes in Health, End-stage disease, and Signs and Symptoms, light version (CHESS-Lite), activities of daily living (ADL), frailty, and the Service Urgency Algorithm. Receiver operative curves were used to calculate thearea under the curve (AUC) for predicting Home Care Intensity coefficient (ratio of the number of days when any home care was provided 90days post-discharge). The interRAI Contact Assessment Instrument was used to calculate these measures. Results: Analysis was stratified using six different home care intensity score cut-offs. CHESS-Lite had a higher AUC for predicting home care intensity at all cut-off levels but was best for predicting the highest level of home care intensity (≥ 0.8) where the AUC was 0.71 (0.64–0.79). The frailty index also had an acceptable AUC. ADL had the lowest AUC. Conclusions: Health instability measured with CHESS-Lite has a high predictive value for identifying home care intensity in geriatric patients after discharge from hospital to home, especially in persons with higher home care intensity scores. Geriatric patients with high health instability should be focused on at discharge to prioritize assessment and initiate timely services for home care support.
- Published
- 2020
30. Assessing the Costs of Home Palliative Care in Italy: Results for a Demetra Multicentre Study
- Author
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Gianlorenzo Scaccabarozzi, Matteo Crippa, Emanuele Amodio, Giacomo Pellegrini, Scaccabarozzi, Gianlorenzo, Crippa, Matteo, Amodio, Emanuele, Pellegrini, Giacomo, Scaccabarozzi, G, Crippa, M, Amodio, E, and Pellegrini, G
- Subjects
Health Information Management ,Leadership and Management ,Health Policy ,cost ,Palliative care ,palliative care ,Health Informatics ,frailty ,home care ,health care economics and organizations - Abstract
Background: The sustainability of palliative care services is nowadays crucial inasmuch as resources for palliative care are internationally scarce, the funding environment is competitive, and the potential population is growing. Methods: The DEMETRA study is a multicentre prospective observational study, describing the intensity of care and the related costs of palliative home care pathways. Results: 475 patients were enrolled as recipients of specialized palliative home care. The majority of recipients were cancer patients (89.4%). The mean duration of palliative care pathways was 46.6 days and mean home care intensity coefficient equal to 0.6. The average daily cost of the model with the reference variables is 96.26 euros. Factors statistically significantly associated with an increase in mean daily costs were greater dependence and extreme frailty (p < 0.05). Otherwise, a longer duration of treatment course was associated with a significant decrease in mean daily costs (p < 0.001). Conclusions: In terms of clinical and organizational management, considering the close association with the intensity and cost of the path, frailty should be systematically assessed by all facilities that potentially refer patients to home palliative care teams, and it should be carefully recorded in a standardized payment rate perspective.
- Published
- 2022
31. Palliative care at home: quality measurement and organizational drivers: evidences from Italy
- Author
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Pietro Giorgio Lovaglio, Gianlorenzo Scaccabarozzi, Scaccabarozzi, G, and Lovaglio, P
- Subjects
Rasch analysi ,Statistics and Probability ,Palliative care ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Sample (statistics) ,Home palliative care ,Quality driver ,Quality of the care ,Social Sciences (all) ,Unit (housing) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Quality (business) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Implementation ,media_common ,Rasch model ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,General Social Sciences ,Quantile regression ,SECS-S/03 - STATISTICA ECONOMICA ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Catchment area ,business ,Psychology - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to measure the quality level of care provided by Home palliative units delivering specialized care in Italy and to determine their main drivers among process/structure characteristics. Data were collected via e-survey from a sample of 118 Home palliative care units (nearly 40,000 patients cared in 2013), representing 66% of Home palliative care units active in 2013, within an Institutional initiative aimed at monitoring the practices used in palliative care. Respondents were given a list of 38 good practices and were asked to identify those applied in their units on a daily basis. The dichotomous Rasch Model was used to identify a unidimensional construct defining unitsâ quality, such as the propensity to deliver high quality care. Linear and quantile regression models were used to assess the relationship of the Rasch quality scores with unitsâ structural/process characteristics. The results show large differences of quality levels among units and among practices in terms of applicationâs difficulty. The main quality predictors consist in the collaboration with Hospitals/Hospices in the same catchment area, the amount of specialized nurses in the unit and the additional delivery of basic palliative care. These findings demonstrate a hierarchy of the practicesâ difficulty and the principal drivers that may favor future challenges, clearly illustrating a roadmap which maximizes the propensity for successful future implementations
- Published
- 2017
32. Monitoring the Italian Home Palliative Care Services
- Author
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Pietro Giorgio Lovaglio, Matteo Crippa, Fabrizio Limonta, Mariadonata Bellentani, Carlo Peruselli, Gianlorenzo Scaccabarozzi, Scaccabarozzi, G, Lovaglio, P, Limonta, F, Peruselli, C, Bellentani, M, and Crippa, M
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,Leadership and Management ,Best practice ,best practice ,lcsh:Medicine ,Health Informatics ,Certification ,home palliative care units ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health Information Management ,Italian National Observatory ,Care activity ,medicine ,best practices ,030212 general & internal medicine ,National data ,quality of the care ,Data collection ,palliative care ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,lcsh:R ,Outcome measures ,SECS-S/03 - STATISTICA ECONOMICA ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,home palliative care unit ,business - Abstract
Background: In Italy, there currently is a lack of reliable and consistent data on home palliative care provided to people near death. Objectives: Monitoring the activities of the Italian Home Palliative Care Services, according to the 2014 national data collection program entitled &ldquo, Observatory of Best Practices in Palliative Care&rdquo, and providing process/outcome measures on a subsample (Best Practice Panel), on regulatory standards and on complete/reliable activity data. Design: A data collection web portal using two voluntary internet-based questionnaires in order to retrospectively identify the main care activity data provided within the year 2013 by Home care units. In the Best Practice Panel and International best practices, eligibility and quality measures refer to the national standards of the NL 38/2010. Setting/Subject: Home Palliative Care Services (HPCSs) that provided care from January to December 2013. Results: 118 Home care units were monitored, globally accounting for 40,955 assisted patients within the year 2013 (38,384 cancer patients), 56 (47.5% of 118) were admitted in the Best Practice Panel. Non-cancer (5%) and pediatric (0.4%) patients represented negligible percentages of frail care patients, and a majority of patients died at home (respectively nearly 75% and 80% of cancer and non-cancer patients). Conclusion: The study demonstrated the feasibility of the collection of certified data from Home care services through a web-based system. Only 80% of the facilities met the requirements provided by the Italian NL 38/2010. Moreover, the extension of the palliative care services provided to frail non-cancer and pediatric patients, affected by complex and advanced chronic conditions, is still inadequate in Italy.
- Published
- 2019
33. The 'aRIANNA' Project: An Observational Study on a Model of Early Identification of Patients with Palliative Care Needs through the Integration between Primary Care and Italian Home Palliative Care Units
- Author
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Matteo Crippa, Pietro Giorgio Lovaglio, Giacomo Pellegrini, Carlo Peruselli, Fabrizio Limonta, Pierangelo Lora Aprile, Gianlorenzo Scaccabarozzi, Emanuele Amodio, Scaccabarozzi, G, Amodio, E, Pellegrini, G, Limonta, F, Lora Aprile, P, Lovaglio, P, Peruselli, C, Crippa, M, Scaccabarozzi, Gianlorenzo, Amodio, Emanuele, Pellegrini, Giacomo, Limonta, Fabrizio, Lora Aprile, Pierangelo, Lovaglio, Pietro Giorgio, Peruselli, Carlo, and Crippa, Matteo
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,public health approach ,Decision Making ,integration ,Primary care ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Home Health Nursing ,early identification ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,General Nursing ,Nursing (all)2901 Nursing (miscellaneous) ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,palliative care ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Identification (information) ,Early Diagnosis ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,SECS-S/03 - STATISTICA ECONOMICA ,Italy ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,Hospice and Palliative Care Nursing ,Female ,Observational study ,business - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to illustrate the characteristics of patients with palliative care (PC) needs, early identified by general practitioners (GPS), and to analyze their care process in home PC services. Background: Early identification and service integration are key components to providing quality palliative care (PC) services ensuring the best possible service for patients and their families. However, in Italy, PC is often provided only in the last phase of life and for oncological patients, with a fragmented service. Methods: Multicenter prospective observational study, lasting in total 18 months, implemented in a sample of Italian Home Palliative Care Units (HPCUs), enrolling and monitoring patients with limited life expectancy, early identified by 94 GPS. The study began on March 1, 2014 and ended on August 31, 2015. Results: Nine hundred thirty-seven patients, out of a total pool of 139,071, were identified by GPS as having a low life expectancy and PC needs. Of these, 556 (59.3%) were nononcological patients. The GPS sent 433 patients to the HPCUs for multidimensional assessment, and 328 (75.8%) were placed in the care of both settings (basic or specialist). For all patients included in the study, both oncological and nononcological patients, there was a high rate of death at home, around 70%. Discussion: This study highlights how a model based on early identification, multidimensional evaluation, and integration of services can promote adequate PC, also for noncancer patients, with a population-based approach.
- Published
- 2018
34. Hospital, local palliative care network and public health: how do they involve terminally ill patients?
- Author
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Gianlorenzo Scaccabarozzi, Fabrizio Limonta, Emanuele Amodio, Scaccabarozzi, G, Limonta, F, Amodio, E, Scaccabarozzi, Gianlorenzo, Limonta, Fabrizio, and Amodio, Emanuele
- Subjects
Registrie ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,MEDLINE ,Terminally ill ,Hospital ,03 medical and health sciences ,Palliative Care, Hospital, Public Health, costs ,0302 clinical medicine ,Retrospective Studie ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Terminally Ill ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Community Health Services ,Registries ,Community Health Service ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Public health ,Palliative Care ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Retrospective cohort study ,Hospitals ,Italy ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Emergency medicine ,Cohort ,Female ,Death certificate ,Public Health ,Health Services Research ,business ,Human - Abstract
Background: Over one quarter of the health care expenditures is estimated to be spent for patients in the last year of life (LYL). For these patients, palliative care (PC) has been suggested as a response for improving the standards of care and reducing health costs. The aim of this study was to analyze a cohort of LYL people, in terms of comparing hospitalised patients who had been referred for PC to patients receiving usual care (UC). Methods: Retrospective study carried out on patients resident in Lecco (Italy) who died between 2012 and 2013. Records of patients were obtained from the Death certificate registry and cross-linked with Regional Healthcare Information System, Hospital Discharge Records and Palliative Care Registry . A total of 5830 patients were analyzed. Results: At least one hospitalization was reported by 2586 (44.3%) patients in the last month of life and 3957 (67.9%) patients in the last year of life. A total of 1114 (19.1%) patients were referred to palliative care with median duration of enrollment of 31 days (IQR = 11–69). PC was found to decrease the risk of hospital admission (adj-OR = 0.21; 95% CI = 0.18–0.26) and dying in hospital (adj-OR = 0.03; 95% CI = 0.02–0.04). Conclusions: Patients in the last year of life show a high risk of hospitalization, which represents a substantial component of health-care costs. Our study suggests that home PC consultation could represent an important public health strategy in order to lower hospital costs for LYL patients and reduce the probability of dying in hospital.
- Published
- 2017
35. Frailty and ethics at the end of life: The importance of a comprehensive assessment.
- Author
-
Mazzola P, Okoye C, Riccò A, Umidi S, Crippa M, Scaccabarozzi G, and Bellelli G
- Subjects
- Humans, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Frail Elderly, Male, Female, Terminal Care ethics, Frailty, Geriatric Assessment methods
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Predicting 60-Day Mortality in a Home-Care Service: Development of a New Inter-RAI 49-Frailty Index in Patients with Chronic Disease and without a Cancer Diagnosis.
- Author
-
Morandi A, Zambon A, Crippa M, Re M, Riva L, Lombardi F, Mazzola P, Scaccabarozzi G, and Bellelli G
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Male, Retrospective Studies, Chronic Disease, Frailty diagnosis, Neoplasms diagnosis, Home Care Services
- Abstract
Objective: Frailty Index (FI) is used to define the level of frailty in various clinical settings. Fifteen- and 26-item FIs have been demonstrated to predict 1-year mortality and intensity of care in home care (HC) and palliative home care (PHC). The objective of this study was to develop a new FI to predict the 60-day risk of death or transition to a PHC service after the initiation of an HC service in patients with chronic disease and without a cancer diagnosis., Design: Retrospective cohort study., Setting and Participants: Patients 18 years and older followed in an HC service of a "Frailty Department-Local Palliative Care Network" from January 1, 2017, to October 31, 2021., Methods: A 49-item FI (FI-49) was developed selecting variables within the standardized international Residential Assessment Instrument assessments (interRAI-HC) and compared to existing FIs with 15 and 26 variables., Results: A total of 2099 patients were included in the study with a median age of 80.0 years (IQR: 72.0-86.0) and a predominantly female population (62.4%). Among these patients, 8% died or were transferred to PHC within the 60-day follow-up. The FI-49 demonstrated a higher ability to predict 60-day mortality (C index 0.8165, 95% CI 0.7848-0.8481) compared to the 26- and 15-item FI. An FI-49 cutoff of 0.33 was also selected to provide clinicians with a more practical approach (C-index of 0.7044, 95% CI 0.6796-0.7292)., Conclusion and Implication: The FI-49 is a good predictor of short-term mortality or transition to palliative care among older patients referred to an HC service. The automatic calculation of this tool could facilitate more appropriate care planning and the correct allocation of healthcare resources, especially considering the rapid ageing of the population., Competing Interests: Disclosure The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 AMDA – The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Environmental and health-related external costs of meat consumption in Italy: estimations and recommendations through life cycle assessment.
- Author
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Arrigoni A, Marveggio D, Allievi F, Dotelli G, and Scaccabarozzi G
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Humans, Environment, Italy, Agriculture, Meat
- Abstract
The literature on the external costs of food consumption is limited. This study aims at advancing in this field by translating the environmental and health-related impacts generated by the life-cycle of meat into external costs via monetization. The main types of meat consumed in Italy are used as a case study. The potential external costs are estimated via attributional life cycle assessment (LCA), using: i) the ReCiPe method for the environmental impact assessment (fourteen impact categories), ii) the population attributional fractions for the health damage from meat ingestion, and iii) the CE Delft environmental prices for monetization. Results show that processed pork and beef generate the highest costs on society, with an external cost of approximately 2€ per 100 g. Fresh pork and poultry follow, with a cost of 1€ and 0.5€ per 100 g, respectively. For comparison, the potential external costs of legumes (i.e., a plant-based alternative to meat) are estimated to be from eight to twenty times lower than meat (around 0.05€ per 100 g of legumes). In 2018, meat consumed in Italy potentially generated a cost on society of 36.6 bn€. The burden arises almost equally from impacts generated before meat ingestion (mainly associated with the emissions arisen from farming), and after the ingestion (due to diseases potentially associated with meat consumption). A sensitivity analysis on the main parameters revealed a large uncertainty on the final yearly cost, ranging from 19 to 93 bn€. Although more research is needed to improve the accuracy and the validity of the models used in the study (e.g., human health impact assessment, monetization) and to include potential external costs currently unaccounted for (e.g., water use, animal welfare, occupational health), results show unequivocal significant costs associated with meat consumption. We thus advocate for policies aimed at reducing these costs and allocating them properly., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Assessing the Costs of Home Palliative Care in Italy: Results for a Demetra Multicentre Study.
- Author
-
Scaccabarozzi G, Crippa M, Amodio E, and Pellegrini G
- Abstract
Background: The sustainability of palliative care services is nowadays crucial inasmuch as resources for palliative care are internationally scarce, the funding environment is competitive, and the potential population is growing., Methods: The DEMETRA study is a multicentre prospective observational study, describing the intensity of care and the related costs of palliative home care pathways., Results: 475 patients were enrolled as recipients of specialized palliative home care. The majority of recipients were cancer patients (89.4%). The mean duration of palliative care pathways was 46.6 days and mean home care intensity coefficient equal to 0.6. The average daily cost of the model with the reference variables is 96.26 euros. Factors statistically significantly associated with an increase in mean daily costs were greater dependence and extreme frailty ( p < 0.05). Otherwise, a longer duration of treatment course was associated with a significant decrease in mean daily costs ( p < 0.001)., Conclusions: In terms of clinical and organizational management, considering the close association with the intensity and cost of the path, frailty should be systematically assessed by all facilities that potentially refer patients to home palliative care teams, and it should be carefully recorded in a standardized payment rate perspective.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The Relationship between Practitioners and Caregivers during a Treatment of Palliative Care: A Grounded Theory of a Challenging Collaborative Process.
- Author
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Rossi P, Crippa M, and Scaccabarozzi G
- Subjects
- Grounded Theory, Humans, Pain, Qualitative Research, Caregivers, Palliative Care
- Abstract
The possibility of coming to a "good death" is a challenging issue that crosses ethical and religious beliefs, cultural assumptions, as well as medical expertise. The provision of palliative care for relieving patients' pain is a practice that reshapes the path to the event of death and gives form to a particular context of awareness, recalling the notion proposed by Glaser and Strauss. This decision redesigns the relationships between patients, practitioners and caregivers and introduces a new pattern of collaboration between them. Our study focuses on the implications of the collaboration between practitioners and caregivers, starting from the assumption that the latter may provide support to their loved ones and to the practitioners, but need to be supported too. We provide a qualitative analysis of this collaboration based on an empirical research that took place in four different settings of provision of palliative care, reporting the contrast between the affective engagement of caregivers and the professional approach of practitioners. We claim that this ambivalent collaboration, while embedded in contingent and incommensurable experiences, brings to the fore the broader understanding of the path to a "good death," outlining its societal representation as a collective challenge.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. An estimation of the number of children requiring pediatric palliative care in Italy.
- Author
-
Benini F, Bellentani M, Reali L, Lazzarin P, De Zen L, Pellegatta F, Aprile PL, and Scaccabarozzi G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Italy, Male, Child Health Services, Health Services Needs and Demand, Palliative Care
- Abstract
Background: Pediatric palliative care (PPC) addresses the physical and psychological needs of children suffering from life-limiting diseases. To define prevention and educational plans and to properly allocate resources, a precise estimation of the PPC burden is required., Objectives: To estimate the current number of children requiring PPC in Italy, useful to assist policy-makers and healthcare bodies in the organization and allocation of PPC resources., Methods: Literature data, The Global Atlas of Palliative Care at the End of Life and Italian national databases have been consulted., Results: According to our estimation, at present, a total of 20,540-32,864 children in Italy require PPC (34-54 children/100,000 inhabitants) of whom 18 children/100,000 inhabitants require specialized PPC., Conclusions: The present work is a fundamental tool to be used by the institutions, the local networks of PPC and the health programmers when formulating organizational models and care plans consistent with the actual need for PPC.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. COVID-19 emergency and palliative medicine: an intervention model'.
- Author
-
Riva L, Caraceni A, Vigorita F, Berti J, Martinelli MP, Crippa M, Pellegrini G, and Scaccabarozzi G
- Abstract
Objectives: The aim of this work is to describe the multidisciplinary model of intervention applied and the characteristics of some COVID-19 patients assisted by the hospital palliative care unit (UCP-H) of an Italian hospital in Lombardy, the Italian region most affected by the COVID-19 pandemic., Methods: A retrospective study was conducted on patients admitted to the A. Manzoni Hospital (Lecco, Lombardy Region, Italy) and referred to the UCP-H between 11 March 2020 and 18 April 2020, the period of maximum spread of COVID-19 in this area. Data were collected on the type of hospitalisation, triage process, modality of palliative care and psychological support provided., Results: 146 COVID-10 patients were referred to the UCP-H. Of these, 120 died during the observation time (82%) while 15 (10.2%) improved and were discharged from the UCP-H care. 93 had less favourable characteristics (rapid deterioration of respiratory function, old age, multiple comorbidities) and an intensive clinical approach was considered contraindicated, while 48 patients had more favourable presentations. Mean follow-up was 4.8 days. A mean of 4.3 assessments per patient were performed. As to respiratory support, 94 patients were treated with oxygen only (at different volumes) and 45 with Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP)., Conclusion: The ongoing pandemic highlighted the need for dedicated palliative care teams and units for dying patients. This work highlights how palliative medicine specialist can make a fundamental contribution thanks to their ability and work experience in an organised multiprofessional context., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2020
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42. Impact of Palliative Care in Evaluating and Relieving Symptoms in Patients with Advanced Cancer. Results from the DEMETRA Study.
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Corli O, Pellegrini G, Bosetti C, Riva L, Crippa M, Amodio E, and Scaccabarozzi G
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- Anxiety epidemiology, Clinical Trials as Topic, Female, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Prospective Studies, Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms therapy, Palliative Care
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Background: Cancer patients experience multiple symptoms throughout the course of the disease. We aimed to provide a comprehensive analysis of the symptom burden in patients with advanced cancer at admission to specialist palliative care (PC) services and seven days later to estimate the immediate impact of PC intervention. Patient and methods: The analysis was based on an observational, prospective, multicenter study (named DEMETRA) conducted in Italy on new patients accessing network specialist PC centers during the period May 2017-November 2017. The prevalence and intensity of symptoms were assessed at baseline and after seven days using three tools including the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS). Results: Five PC centers recruited 865 cancer patients. Thirty-three different symptoms were observed at the baseline, the most frequent being asthenia (84.9%) and poor well-being (71%). The intensity of the most frequent symptoms according to ESAS ranged from 5.5 for asthenia to 3.9 for nausea. The presence and intensity of physical symptoms increased with increasing levels of anxiety and depression. After seven days, prevalence of nausea and breathlessness as well as intensity of almost all symptoms significantly decreased. Conclusions: The study confirmed the considerable symptom burden of patients with advanced cancer. PC intervention has significantly reduced the severity of symptoms, despite the patients' advanced disease and short survival.
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- 2020
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43. Clinical Care Conditions and Needs of Palliative Care Patients from Five Italian Regions: Preliminary Data of the DEMETRA Project.
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Scaccabarozzi G, Amodio E, Riva L, Corli O, Maltoni M, Di Silvestre G, Turriziani A, Morino P, Pellegrini G, and Crippa M
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In order to plan the right palliative care for patients and their families, it is essential to have detailed information about patients' needs. To gain insight into these needs, we analyzed five Italian local palliative care networks and assessed the clinical care conditions of patients facing the complexities of advanced and chronic disease. A longitudinal, observational, noninterventional study was carried out in five Italian regions from May 2017 to November 2018. Patients who accessed the palliative care networks were monitored for 12 months. Sociodemographic, clinical, and symptom information was collected with several tools, including the Necesidades Paliativas CCOMS-ICO (NECPAL) tool, the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS), and interRAI Palliative Care (interRAI-PC). There were 1013 patients in the study. The majority (51.7%) were recruited at home palliative care units. Cancer was the most frequent diagnosis (85.4%), and most patients had at least one comorbidity (58.8%). Cancer patients reported emotional stress with severe symptoms (38.7% vs. 24.3% in noncancer patients; p = 0.001) and were less likely to have clinical frailty (13.3% vs. 43.9%; p < 0.001). Our study confirms that many patients face the last few months of life with comorbidities or extreme frailty. This study contributes to increasing the general knowledge on palliative care needs in a high-income country.
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- 2020
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44. Predicting care intensity in geriatric home care patients: a comparison of different measures.
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Scaccabarozzi G, Palmer K, Onder G, Pellegrini G, Crippa M, Colombo CO, Lombardi F, Beretta G, and Bernabei R
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- Activities of Daily Living, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Critical Care, Female, Frail Elderly, Frailty, Humans, Inpatients, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Discharge, Home Care Services
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Background: Dependency in older ages is increasing. Many older persons receive care while living in the community. We aimed to identify the predictive value of four clinical measurements to predict home care intensity in older patients following discharge from hospital to home care over 90 days., Methods: We included 425 inpatients from the "Frailty Department-Local Palliative Care Network" of the local social health authority (ASST) Lecco, Italy (mean age 75.4 years, SD 14.5; female 75.5%). Changes in Health, End-stage disease, and Signs and Symptoms, light version (CHESS-Lite), activities of daily living (ADL), frailty, and the Service Urgency Algorithm. Receiver operative curves were used to calculate the area under the curve (AUC) for predicting Home Care Intensity coefficient (ratio of the number of days when any home care was provided 90 days post-discharge). The interRAI Contact Assessment Instrument was used to calculate these measures., Results: Analysis was stratified using six different home care intensity score cut-offs. CHESS-Lite had a higher AUC for predicting home care intensity at all cut-off levels but was best for predicting the highest level of home care intensity (≥ 0.8) where the AUC was 0.71 (0.64-0.79). The frailty index also had an acceptable AUC. ADL had the lowest AUC., Conclusions: Health instability measured with CHESS-Lite has a high predictive value for identifying home care intensity in geriatric patients after discharge from hospital to home, especially in persons with higher home care intensity scores. Geriatric patients with high health instability should be focused on at discharge to prioritize assessment and initiate timely services for home care support.
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- 2020
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45. Monitoring the Italian Home Palliative Care Services.
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Scaccabarozzi G, Lovaglio PG, Limonta F, Peruselli C, Bellentani M, and Crippa M
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Background: In Italy, there currently is a lack of reliable and consistent data on home palliative care provided to people near death., Objectives: Monitoring the activities of the Italian Home Palliative Care Services, according to the 2014 national data collection program entitled "Observatory of Best Practices in Palliative Care" and providing process/outcome measures on a subsample (Best Practice Panel), on regulatory standards and on complete/reliable activity data., Design: A data collection web portal using two voluntary internet-based questionnaires in order to retrospectively identify the main care activity data provided within the year 2013 by Home care units. In the Best Practice Panel and International best practices, eligibility and quality measures refer to the national standards of the NL 38/2010. Setting/Subject: Home Palliative Care Services (HPCSs) that provided care from January to December 2013., Results: 118 Home care units were monitored, globally accounting for 40,955 assisted patients within the year 2013 (38,384 cancer patients); 56 (47.5% of 118) were admitted in the Best Practice Panel. Non-cancer (5%) and pediatric (0.4%) patients represented negligible percentages of frail care patients, and a majority of patients died at home (respectively nearly 75% and 80% of cancer and non-cancer patients)., Conclusion: The study demonstrated the feasibility of the collection of certified data from Home care services through a web-based system. Only 80% of the facilities met the requirements provided by the Italian NL 38/2010. Moreover, the extension of the palliative care services provided to frail non-cancer and pediatric patients, affected by complex and advanced chronic conditions, is still inadequate in Italy.
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- 2019
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46. The "ARIANNA" Project: An Observational Study on a Model of Early Identification of Patients with Palliative Care Needs through the Integration between Primary Care and Italian Home Palliative Care Units.
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Scaccabarozzi G, Amodio E, Pellegrini G, Limonta F, Lora Aprile P, Lovaglio PG, Peruselli C, and Crippa M
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Decision Making, Female, Humans, Italy, Male, Prospective Studies, Early Diagnosis, Home Health Nursing methods, Hospice and Palliative Care Nursing methods, Hospice and Palliative Care Nursing standards, Primary Health Care methods
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Objective: The aim of this study was to illustrate the characteristics of patients with palliative care (PC) needs, early identified by general practitioners (GPs), and to analyze their care process in home PC services., Background: Early identification and service integration are key components to providing quality palliative care (PC) services ensuring the best possible service for patients and their families. However, in Italy, PC is often provided only in the last phase of life and for oncological patients, with a fragmented service., Methods: Multicenter prospective observational study, lasting in total 18 months, implemented in a sample of Italian Home Palliative Care Units (HPCUs), enrolling and monitoring patients with limited life expectancy, early identified by 94 GPs. The study began on March 1, 2014 and ended on August 31, 2015., Results: Nine hundred thirty-seven patients, out of a total pool of 139,071, were identified by GPs as having a low life expectancy and PC needs. Of these, 556 (59.3%) were nononcological patients. The GPs sent 433 patients to the HPCUs for multidimensional assessment, and 328 (75.8%) were placed in the care of both settings (basic or specialist). For all patients included in the study, both oncological and nononcological patients, there was a high rate of death at home, around 70%., Discussion: This study highlights how a model based on early identification, multidimensional evaluation, and integration of services can promote adequate PC, also for noncancer patients, with a population-based approach.
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- 2018
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47. Quality assessment of palliative home care in Italy.
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Scaccabarozzi G, Lovaglio PG, Limonta F, Floriani M, and Pellegrini G
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- Benchmarking, Caregivers, Home Care Services standards, Humans, Inservice Training organization & administration, Italy, Palliative Care standards, Patient Care Team, Qualitative Research, Quality Indicators, Health Care, Quality of Health Care standards, Terminal Care standards, Home Care Services organization & administration, Palliative Care organization & administration, Quality of Health Care organization & administration, Terminal Care organization & administration
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Rationale: The complexity of end-of-life care, represented by a large number of units caring for dying patients, of different types of organizations motivates the importance of measure the quality of provided care. Despite the law 38/2010 promulgated to remove the barriers and provide affordable access to palliative care, measurement, and monitoring of processes of home care providers in Italy has not been attempted., Aims and Objectives: Using data drawn by an institutional voluntary observatory established in Italy in 2013, collecting home palliative care units caring for people between January and December 2013, we assess the degree to which Italian home palliative care teams endorse a set of standards required by the 38/2010 law and best practices as emerged from the literature., Methods: The evaluation strategy is based on Rasch analysis, allowing to objectively measuring both performances of facilities and quality indicators' difficulty on the same metric, using 14 quality indicators identified by the observatory's steering committee., Results: Globally, 195 home care teams were registered in the observatory reporting globally 40 955 cured patients in 2013 representing 66% of the population of home palliative care units active in Italy in 2013. Rasch analysis identifies 5 indicators ("interview" with caregivers, continuous training provided to medical and nursing staff, provision of specialized multidisciplinary interventions, psychological support to the patient and family, and drug supply at home) easy to endorse by health care providers and 3 problematic indicators (presence of a formally established Local Network of Palliative care in the area of reference, provision of the care for most problematic patient requiring high intensity of the care, and the percentage of cancer patient dying at Home)., Conclusions: The lack of Local Network of Palliative care, required by law 38/2010, is, at the present, the main barrier to its application. However, the adopted methodology suggests that a clear roadmap for health facilities to afford future quality and normative challenges., (© 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
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- 2017
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48. Hospital, local palliative care network and public health: how do they involve terminally ill patients?
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Scaccabarozzi G, Limonta F, and Amodio E
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Italy, Male, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Community Health Services, Hospitals, Palliative Care organization & administration, Public Health, Terminally Ill
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- 2017
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49. Survey of Italian general practitioners: knowledge, opinions, and activities of palliative care.
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Beccaro M, Lora Aprile P, Scaccabarozzi G, Cancian M, and Costantini M
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- Adult, Aged, Attitude to Death, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Italy epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Population Surveillance, Attitude of Health Personnel, General Practitioners statistics & numerical data, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Palliative Care statistics & numerical data, Practice Patterns, Physicians' statistics & numerical data, Professional Competence statistics & numerical data, Terminal Care statistics & numerical data
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Context: General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in the end-of-life care of patients; however, currently in Italy, there are no national population-based studies available of the knowledge and activities of GPs in palliative care., Objectives: This survey aimed to investigate the knowledge, opinions, and activities of Italian GPs regarding palliative care., Methods: A telephone survey of 1690 GPs was performed. Information was gathered through an ad hoc questionnaire., Results: Valid interviews were obtained for 88% of the sampled GPs (n=1489). Regarding knowledge, 25% of GPs recognized a correct definition of palliative care, 41% the objectives of palliative care, 66% that palliative care should be provided by a multiprofessional team including GPs, and 60% that in-home care for patients at the end of life requires an individual plan care. Furthermore, 92% of them reported that "there is no maximum daily morphine dose for the management of pain." Regarding opinions, most of the GPs strongly agreed that for patients at the end of life, the GPs' duties included availability during working hours to break bad news to patients and families and to collaborate with the multiprofessional team in establishing an individual care plan. Finally, regarding activities, most GPs reported that, in their daily practice with patients at the end of life, they discontinue the drugs that are not beneficial to symptom management and seek advice from palliative care physicians when symptom management is ineffective., Conclusion: This survey reveals the uncertainty of GPs regarding many theoretical issues but a strong willingness to integrate with the multiprofessional palliative care team. To further enhance the skills of GPs and facilitate the collaboration with palliative care services, it might be useful to realize ad hoc training schemes tailored to the different organizational procedures of in-home palliative care services., (Copyright © 2013 U.S. Cancer Pain Relief Committee. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2013
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50. Evaluating a home palliative care service: development of indicators for a continuous quality improvement program.
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Peruselli C, Marinari M, Brivio B, Castagnini G, Cavana M, Centrone G, Magni C, Merlini M, Scaccabarozzi GL, and Paci E
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- Evaluation Studies as Topic, Family, Humans, Italy, Patient Satisfaction, Quality of Life, Surveys and Questionnaires, Home Care Services standards, Palliative Care standards, Quality Assurance, Health Care, Terminal Care
- Published
- 1997
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