Publications by authors named "Silvia Bonomi"

This work aims to provide information, guidelines, established practices and standards, and an extensive evaluation on new and promising technologies for the implementation of a secure information sharing platform for health-related data. We focus strictly on the technical aspects and specifically on the sharing of health information, studying innovative techniques for secure information sharing within the health-care domain, and we describe our solution and evaluate the use of blockchain methodologically for integrating within our implementation. To do so, we analyze health information sharing within the concept of the PANACEA project that facilitates the design, implementation, and deployment of a relevant platform.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Due to the advent of novel technologies and digital opportunities allowing to simplify user lives, healthcare is increasingly evolving towards digitalization. This represent a great opportunity on one side but it also exposes healthcare organizations to multiple threats (both digital and not) that may lead an attacker to compromise the security of medial processes and potentially patients' safety. Today technical cybersecurity countermeasures are used to protect the confidentiality, integrity and availability of data and information systems - especially in the healthcare domain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: This study investigated the level of knowledge about schizophrenia of primary care doctors working in the city of Brescia, Italy, and variables associated with better information.

Method: The study design was devised after 2 joint meetings with leading figures of the Italian College of General Practitioners. A cross-sectional evaluation of 215 general practitioners was performed (June 2002).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Glutamatergic dysfunction is one of the major hypotheses for the pathogenesis of schizophrenia. The GRIA1 gene encodes for one (GluR1) of the four (GluR1-4) ionotropic AMPA receptor subunits. GRIA1 is a good candidate gene for susceptibility to schizophrenia since it maps in 5q33, a region where the presence of susceptibility loci has been suggested by independent genome-wide scans and because its expression has been found to be decreased in the brain of some schizophrenia patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

There is emerging evidence that psychosis in Alzheimer Disease (AD) represents a clinically relevant phenotype with a distinct biological process. It has been reported that a functional polymorphism of the catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) gene predisposes to an increased risk for schizophrenia and likely to psychosis susceptibility. Aim of this study was to evaluate functional COMT genetic variation as a risk factor for psychosis in Alzheimer Disease.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF