Background: Even though evidence based medicine, guidelines and algorithms still represent the pillars of the management of chronic diseases (i.e: hypertension, diabetes mellitus), a patient centred approach has been recently proposed as a successful strategy, in particular to improve drug adherence. Aim of the present review is to evaluate the unmet needs in LUTS/BPH management and the possible impact of a patient centered approach in this setting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: In ICU, the stay is frequently a stressful experience. Caregivers may help to understand patients' perceptions; however, their reliability is uncertain. Despite the recent recommendations of lighter sedation targets, little is known about the impact of "conscious sedation" on ICU patients memories.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: International guidelines recommend systematic assessment of pain, agitation/sedation and delirium with validated scales for all ICU patients. However, these evaluations are often not done. We have created an e-learning training platform for the continuous medical education, and assessed its efficacy in increasing the use of validated tools by all medical and nursing staff of the participating ICUs during their daily practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: An increasing amount of literature has studied changes in communication skills in medical and nursing undergraduate students.
Aim: To evaluate whether occupational therapists' communication behaviours change with experience.
Material And Methods: A total of 45 participants (second-year OT students, final-year OT students, professional OTs) were enrolled and met three simulated clients.
Illness representations of chronic patients are important to explain adherence and preventive behaviours. However, it is unclear if the patient's objective health status may influence illness representations and perceived adherence. This study explored if health status and socio-demographic characteristics influence illness representations and perceived adherence in haemophilic patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Health Psychol
December 2014
This study aimed at exploring the hematologists' internal representation of a difficult encounter with a hemophilic patient, using a written open format. Narrations were analyzed with Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis. Three main issues were identified, each with sub-issues: (1) Inside the relationship: to tell or not to tell, the balance between a normal life and a deviant medical condition, the guilt; (2) The borders of the professional role: professional values, the "do-it-all" doctor; and (3) The existential confrontation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To verify whether the patient's satisfaction with quality of life (QoL) is similar to or different from the occupational therapist's perception of the patient's satisfaction.
Materials And Methods: Each patient enrolled was given the Satisfaction Profile (SAT-P) questionnaire to be filled out personally; the same questionnaire, the SAT-P, was given to the respective occupational therapist who was asked to fill it out by evaluating the patient's satisfaction as perceived by the therapist. A descriptive statistic was applied for socio-demographic data to describe the cohort.
Background: A great deal of what medical students learn in terms of behaviors, values, and attitudes related to their profession is conveyed by the hidden curriculum.
Aim: To explore the messages conveyed by the hidden curriculum as perceived by third-year students of the Milan School of Medicine, Italy, following their first clinical internship.
Method: Three group interviews were conducted.
Introduction: The literature on the psychological effects of thrombophilia testing is unclear. Little is known about the complex world of significance subjects construct around the test.
Objective: The study explored the peculiar network of implicit meanings that may be linked to the experience of being tested.
Background: It has been shown that the pineal gland plays a fundamental role in mediating either the spiritual perception or the anticancer immunity by stimulating the endogenous production of anticancer cytokine interleukin (IL)-2.
Objective: The present study was performed to evaluate the impact of a spiritual approach consisting of Kriya Yoga program alone or in association with melatonin (MLT) or low-dose IL-2 plus MLT on the survival time in a group of metastatic cancer patients with life expectancy less than 1 year.
Materials And Methods: A case-control study was carried out in 240 patients (M/F: 146/94; median age: 62 years, range: 34-71, suffering from non-small-cell lung cancer or gastrointestinal tumors) who were subdivided into 6 groups of 40 patients, treated with supportive care alone as a control group, supportive care plus Yoga, MLT alone, MLT plus Yoga, inteleukin-2 plus MLT, or IL-2 plus MLT plus Yoga.
Background: The Program to Enhance Relational and Communication Skills (PERCS) was developed at a large hospital in the United States to enhance clinicians' preparedness to engage in difficult conversations.
Aim: To describe the implementation of PERCS in an Italian hospital and assess the program's efficacy.
Methods: The Italian PERCS program featured 4-h experiential workshops enrolling 10-15 interdisciplinary participants.
Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) is a syndrome where a person with epilepsy dies suddenly and no other cause of death is found. The question of informing patients and their families about SUDEP remains a problematic issue. The aim of this study is to explore whether Italian physicians interested in epilepsy believe that they should discuss SUDEP with patients and/or their families.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScand J Occup Ther
September 2010
Aims: The purpose of this pilot study was to assess the feasibility of a quantitative approach to study occupational therapist-client interactions. Role plays were videotaped in which 10 therapists met three client-actors. A questionnaire assessed the occupational therapists' and the patient-actors' opinion of the role-play experience.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: To analyze the representations and meanings of diabetes from the health workers perspective through an ethnographic approach.
Method: Participants who attended a national conference on diabetes care were asked to write a narrative responding to the question: "For me, diabetes is..
Introduction: This article describes the adaptation and implementation of the Program to Enhance Relational and Communication Skills (PERCS) in Italy. PERCS was originally developed at Children's Hospital Boston and aims to enhance clinicians' preparedness to engage in difficult conversations with patients/families.
Description: After a period of collaboration by the first author with the Children's Hospital Boston, PERCS was launched at San Paolo Hospital, Milan, in 2008.
Child Care Health Dev
July 2010
Background: The aim of the study was to explore the illness experience of individuals affected by phenylketonuria (PKU) and its differences in different patient age groups.
Methods: A qualitative-interpretative methodology was used through in-depth interviews. Textual data were explored using the principles of grounded theory.
The authors discuss the creation of a psycho-educational course based on emotions in a group of diabetes type 2 patients. Its effects were assessed : biologically, by measuring blood sugar levels and body weight; cognitively, by behavioral tests; psycho-emotionally, by Moreno's Social Atom test that evaluates the patient's personal life in the light of his/her pathological conditions. 12 subjects were studied (10 patients and 2 spouses).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGoal: Major cross-cultural differences in truth-telling attitudes and practices have been demonstrated. Until recently, in Italy the doctor could conceal both diagnosis and prognosis to seriously ill patients out of beneficence. Signs of change have been reported, but the extent and way patients would be informed is still unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 24 hrs optional course was realized with 15 students at the Medical School of Milan, with the aim of undertaking the management of the emotional aspects in a difficult communication in medicine. The course was realized through the use of active teaching tools; issues resulted from what literature consider as "difficult communication". Photolangage was used as pre-post test to assess the effects of the course; a satisfaction questionnaire was also used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To examine how patient-centredness is understood and enacted in an American (US) and an Italian group of health care professionals.
Methods: An action research methodology was used. Two interprofessional groups of US (n = 4) and Italian (n = 5) health care professionals independently wrote a patient-centred dialogue between a doctor and a patient based on the same scenario.
The aim of the study is to describe the doctor-patient-companion interaction in the Italian General Practice compared to dyadic encounters. 819 videorecorded visits were included. 650 (79.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe literature about the physician emotional life underlined how to care a collegue generates stress. However this situation is not so much investigated. The aim of this article is to investigate the nature of the relation and of the physician inner life when the doctor meets a patient-doctor, by means of narratives and a qualitative analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to examine patient satisfaction with emergency care at a teaching hospital Emergency Department (ED) in Northern Italy. Level of patient satisfaction was compared with patient expectations at ED access. A questionnaire using a 6-point Likert scale format was administered to 427 patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Psychosom Obstet Gynaecol
September 2006
The aim of the study was to verify in the context of prenatal diagnosis if the communicative style in consultations is modified in relation to the seriousness of the diagnosis. Videoed consultations after executing amniocentesis and ultra-sound scanning of II level were included in the study with the consent of participants. Only visits with Italian speaking couples without psychiatric problems were analyzed for the study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The aim of the study was to evaluate, by means of a randomized controlled trial, whether a patient-centered contraceptive counseling intervention increased the use of contraception, and the knowledge and positive attitudes towards contraception, in women who undergo a termination of pregnancy (TOP).
Methods: The study was carried out at the San Paolo Hospital of Milan between the 1st of February and the 31st of May 2004. Participants (41 women; ages 20-44 years) were randomly divided into two groups: an experimental group (n = 20), who received patient-centered contraceptive counseling, and a control group (n = 21), who received the routine treatment in use at the San Paolo Hospital and were referred to the community health centers after the TOP.