Publications by authors named "M Bobbio"

In the last decade literature focused on a "less is more" approach has been primarily represented by clinical cases describing the excesses of an aggressive, redundant, non-personalized, and non-respectful medicine. Most of these articles focus on a "more is worse" approach and centre around the downstream negative consequences of medical overuse. Having identified a gap in the literature on the experience and practice of less, rather than the harms of excess, we carried out an exploratory qualitative study into how a "less is more" approach works in practice.

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Article Synopsis
  • More and more doctors are using tests and treatments that might not always be needed, which can replace important check-ups by a doctor.
  • It's important to figure out if a test is really necessary to make sure patients get the right care.
  • The Choosing Wisely campaign helps doctors know which tests might not be needed, and in Italy, a group of heart doctors has made a list of five treatments that could be too much or even harmful.
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To reduce overprescribing, the consequences due to the invention of new diseases and the systematic reduction of threshold values have been studied, and projects to reduce procedures of low efficacy, the number of prescribed drugs, and procedures at risk of inappropriateness have been developed. The composition of committees establishing diagnostic criteria was never addressed. To avoid this problem (de-diagnosing) four procedures should be implemented: 1) diagnostic criteria should be assigned to a committee of general practitioners, clinical specialists, experts like epidemiologists, sociologists, philosophers, psychologists, economists, and representatives of citizens and patients; 2) experts do not have relevant conflicts of interest; 3) criteria should be set up as recommendations to facilitate discussion between a physician and a patient on the decision whether to begin a treatment and not as a recommendation functional to overprescription; 4) criteria should be periodically revised to approach the process closer to the experiences and needs of physicians and patients.

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Innovative targeted treatments for neuromuscular disorders (NMDs) can dramatically improve the course of illness. Diagnostic delay, however, is a major impediment. Here, we present a pilot project aimed at assessing the feasibility of a screening program to identify children at high risk for NMDs within the first 30 months of life.

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There is a relevant gap between the medicine learned on books and the clinical practice made of suffering humans facing us. Guidelines recommendations don't usually cover this aspect. The Slow Medicine movement, born in 2011, stands as a model a sober respectful and right healthcare.

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