4 results match your criteria: "Catholic University of Milano[Affiliation]"
Technol Forecast Soc Change
April 2024
Catholic University of Milano, Italy.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth
March 2022
Catholic University of Milano, Milano, Italy.
Background: The COVID-19 social restrictions have increased the risk for depression compared to the previous period in Italian women with Low-Risk Pregnancy (LRP). lLess is known about the impact of COVID-19 restrictions on High-Risk Pregnancy (HRP). This study aimed: 1) to explore levels of depression in women who become pregnant before and during COVID-19 pandemic, distinguishing between LRP and HRP; 2) to analyze the impact of COVID-19 restrictions on pregnancy experience in LRP and HRP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Care Manage Rev
June 2018
Marta Marsilio, PhD, is Assistant Professor, University of Milan, Italy, and Centre for Research in Health and Social Care Management (CERGAS), Bocconi University, Milan, Italy. Aleksandra Torbica, PhD, is Assistant Professor, Centre for Research in Health and Social Care Management (CERGAS), Department of Policy Analysis and Public Management, Bocconi University, Milan, Italy. E-mail: Stefano Villa, PhD, is Associate Professor, Department of Management, Catholic University, Rome, Italy, and Coordinator of field research projects at CERISMAS (Research Centre in Health Care Management), Catholic University of Milano, Italy. This material is based on research supported by the European Health Technology Institute for Socio Economic Research (EHTI) through an unrestricted grant awarded to the Centre for Research in Health and Social Care Management (CERGAS). During the project execution, all authors were affiliated with CERGAS, Bocconi University.
Background: The current literature on the enabling conditions of multidisciplinary teams focuses on the singular dimensions of the organizations (i.e., human resources, clinical pathways, objects) without shedding light on to the way in which these organizational factors interact and mutually influence one another.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Public Health Res
December 2012
Graduate School in Public Economics-DEFAP, Catholic University of Milano, Italy.
This article proposes a critical but non-systematic review of recent health care system reforms in developing countries. The literature reports mixed results as to whether reforms improve the financial protection of the poor or not. We discuss the reasons for these differences by comparing three representative countries: Mexico, Vietnam, and China.
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