115 results match your criteria: "Dondena (Centre for Research on Social Dynamics and Public Policy)[Affiliation]"

Purpose: Mental health problems among adolescents have become more prevalent in recent years. Parents' and siblings' mental health might be affected by living with a depressed adolescent. This study examines how the mental health of family members develops in the years before and after an adolescent seeks help for depression.

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A growing body of research shows that demographic attitudes and behaviors across the life course are socially stratified. Building on this and focusing on the transition to parenthood, we hypothesize that (i) parental socioeconomic status is associated with multiple dimensions of the transition to parenthood, including fertility norms (perceived lower age limit at first birth), ideals (ideal age at first birth), and behaviors (age at first birth), and that (ii) this association varies across national contexts, as national contexts determine the opportunities and constraints that guide young adults' life course attitudes and behaviors. Drawing on the European Social Survey 2006 and 2018 data, we analyze early fertility norms and ideals and later fertility behaviors of a pseudo-panel of individuals born between 1976 and 1988.

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Scaling up integrated care: Can community hospitals be an answer? A multiple-case study from the Emilia-Romagna region in Italy.

Health Policy

November 2024

Centre for Research on Health and Social Care Management (CeRGAS), SDA Bocconi School of Management, Italy; Dondena Centre for Research on Social Dynamics and Public Policy, Bocconi University, Italy; Department of Social and Political Sciences, Bocconi University, Italy. Electronic address:

Integrated care is considered to be essential in improving care for people with chronic conditions who need continuous care. In 2022, the Italian Government asked all regions to build or renovate a massive number of community care facilities, employing European Next Generation funds, to be spent by 2026. Under the theoretical lens of the Structural Contingency Theory, the paper aims at aims at describing the contextual and organizational factors underlying the interconnection between integrated care and community hospitals.

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Women's labor force participation has increased in Western countries, but gender gaps remain, especially among parents. Using a novel comparative perspective, we assess women's and men's employment trajectories from midlife onward by parity and education. We provide insights into the gendered parenthood-employment gaps examining the long-term implications of parenthood beyond the core childbearing ages by decomposing years lived between ages 40-74, in years of employment, joblessness, and retirement.

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Quantifying the potential spatial spread of an infectious pathogen is key to defining effective containment and control strategies. The aim of this study is to estimate the risk of SARS-CoV-2 transmission at different distances in Italy before the first regional lockdown was imposed, identifying important sources of national spreading. To do this, we leverage on a probabilistic model applied to daily symptomatic cases retrospectively ascertained in each Italian municipality with symptom onset between January 28 and March 7, 2020.

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Downgraded dreams: Labor market outcomes and mental health in undocumented migration.

SSM Popul Health

June 2024

On Behalf of Naga, Organizzazione di Volontariato per l'Assistenza Socio-Sanitaria e per i Diritti di Cittadini Stranieri, Rom e Sinti, Italy.

Undocumented immigrant workers are particularly exposed to mental health risk factors, including occupational downgrading - i.e. the loss in occupational status upon arrival.

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Leaving the parental home during the COVID-19 pandemic: the case of Southern Europe.

Adv Life Course Res

March 2024

Department of Social and Political Sciences and "Carlo F. Dondena" Centre for Research on Social Dynamics and Public Policy, Bocconi University, via Röntgen 1, 20136 Milan, Italy.

In 2020, COVID-19-related governmental restrictions forced individuals to radically change their habits, possibly impacting on their living arrangements. Whether COVID-19 affected young adults' propensity to leave the parental home is still unknown; Southern Europe is of particular interest, as youth experience the "latest-late" transition to adulthood, face uncertainty in the labor market, and receive low welfare support. Using EU-SILC longitudinal data from Greece, Spain, Italy, and Portugal, this study examines how home-leaving rates evolved in the short-term and explores the relationship between governmental restrictions, economic characteristics of households and young adults, and leaving home behaviors.

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Family ideals in an era of low fertility.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

February 2024

Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, Department of Paediatrics, National University of Singapore, Singapore 119228, Singapore.

Taking stock of individuals' perceived family ideals is particularly important in the current moment given unprecedented fertility declines and the diversification of households in advanced industrial societies. Study participants in urban China, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, the United States, Italy, Spain, and Norway were asked to evaluate vignettes describing families whose characteristics vary on ten dimensions. In contrast to previous studies that focused on a single dimension, such as fertility ideals or gender roles, this holistic vignette approach identifies the relative importance of each dimension.

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Estimating the potential risk of transmission of arboviruses in the Americas and Europe: a modelling study.

Lancet Planet Health

January 2024

Center for Health Emergencies, Fondazione Bruno Kessler, Trento, Italy; Epilab-Joint Research Unit, Fondazione Edmund Mach-Fondazione Bruno Kessler Joint Research Unit, Trento, Italy. Electronic address:

Background: Estimates of the spatiotemporal distribution of different mosquito vector species and the associated risk of transmission of arboviruses are key to design adequate policies for preventing local outbreaks and reducing the number of human infections in endemic areas. In this study, we quantified the abundance of Aedes albopictus and Aedes aegypti and the local transmission potential for three arboviral infections at an unprecedented spatiotemporal resolution in areas where no entomological surveillance is available.

Methods: We developed a computational model to quantify the daily abundance of Aedes mosquitoes, leveraging temperature and precipitation records.

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Long-term impact of parenting-related leave policies on adolescents' well-being: a systematic review of quasi-experiments.

Eur J Public Health

April 2024

Department of Social and Political Sciences, Carlo F. Dondena Centre for Research on Social Dynamics and Public Policy, Bocconi University, Milano, Italy.

Article Synopsis
  • Parenting-related leave policies have gained support in OECD countries, with previous studies showing positive short-term effects on children but lacking comprehensive long-term assessments during adolescence and young adulthood.
  • A systematic review of studies revealed limited evidence, indicating that introducing these leave policies or gender-specific quotas yields significant long-term benefits, particularly in health, education, and the labor market.
  • Additionally, the mother's socioeconomic and educational background plays a crucial role in moderating adolescents' well-being, with those from more educated backgrounds benefiting more from extended parental leave, emphasizing existing inequalities.
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Over three years since the first COVID-19 vaccine was approved, many countries still have suboptimal vaccination rates despite holding great amounts of vaccines. Overall, there is little evidence on which policies are more effective to encourage vaccination, particularly in countries where a large share of the population remains unvaccinated. In this study, we examine the effectiveness of a community-based intervention carried out in March 2022 in North Macedonia, a country with a large and persistent share of the population that remains unvaccinated.

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Article Synopsis
  • - A study began in 2021 with 2,497 participants to investigate immunity from different COVID-19 vaccines, focusing on responses in healthy individuals and those over 65 with health issues, analyzing results six and twelve months post-vaccination.
  • - At twelve months, participants showed increased anti-Spike IgG antibody levels, influenced by receiving a third vaccine dose and recent infections, while age didn’t significantly impact antibody levels.
  • - Most subjects demonstrated strong T-cell responses regardless of age or health conditions, with high antibody levels against SARS-CoV-2 Spike protein maintained at twelve months, suggesting a combination of vaccination and possible infections led to enhanced immunity.
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Job loss during pregnancy and the risk of miscarriage and stillbirth.

Hum Reprod

November 2023

Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of Essex, Colchester, UK.

Study Question: Does the exposure to job loss during pregnancy increase the risk of miscarriage or stillbirth?

Summary Answer: The experience of own or partner's job loss during the pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of miscarriageand stillbirth.

What Is Known Already: Prior research on the psycho-social aspect of pregnancy loss has investigated the contextual and the individual-level stressors. At the contextual level, natural disasters, air pollution, and economic downturns are associated with higher risk of pregnancy loss.

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Background: The difficulty in identifying SARS-CoV-2 infections has not only been the major obstacle to control the COVID-19 pandemic but also to quantify changes in the proportion of infections resulting in hospitalization, intensive care unit (ICU) admission, or death.

Methods: We developed a model of SARS-CoV-2 transmission and vaccination informed by official estimates of the time-varying reproduction number to estimate infections that occurred in Italy between February 2020 and 2022. Model outcomes were compared with the Italian National surveillance data to estimate changes in the SARS-CoV-2 infection ascertainment ratio (IAR), infection hospitalization ratio (IHR), infection ICU ratio (IIR), and infection fatality ratio (IFR) in five different sub-periods associated with the dominance of the ancestral lineages and Alpha, Delta, and Omicron BA.

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Different monitoring and control policies have been implemented in schools to minimize the spread of SARS-CoV-2. Transmission in schools has been hard to quantify due to the large proportion of asymptomatic carriers in young individuals. We applied a Bayesian approach to reconstruct the transmission chains between 284 SARS-CoV-2 infections ascertained during 87 school outbreak investigations conducted between March and April 2021 in Italy.

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Objectives: To propose a novel framework for COVID-19 vaccine allocation based on three components of Vulnerability, Vaccination, and Values (3Vs).

Methods: A combination of geospatial data analysis and artificial intelligence methods for evaluating vulnerability factors at the local level and allocate vaccines according to a dynamic mechanism for updating vulnerability and vaccine uptake.

Results: A novel approach is introduced including (I) Vulnerability data collection (including country-specific data on demographic, socioeconomic, epidemiological, healthcare, and environmental factors), (II) Vaccination prioritization through estimation of a unique Vulnerability Index composed of a range of factors selected and weighed through an Artificial Intelligence (AI-enabled) expert elicitation survey and scientific literature screening, and (III) Values consideration by identification of the most effective GIS-assisted allocation of vaccines at the local level, considering context-specific constraints and objectives.

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Italy was the first country in Europe to be hit by the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2. Little research has been conducted to understand the economic impact of providing care for SARS-CoV-2 patients during the pandemic. Our study aims to quantify the incremental healthcare costs for hospitalizations associated to being discharged before or after the first SARS-CoV-2 case was notified in Italy, and to a positive or negative SARS-CoV-2 notified infection.

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Background: This study aimed to compare the cost-effectiveness of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) mass testing, carried out in November 2020 in the Italian Bolzano/Südtirol province, to scenarios without mass testing in terms of hospitalizations averted and quality-adjusted life-year (QALYs) saved.

Methods: We applied branching processes to estimate the effective reproduction number (Rt) and model scenarios with and without mass testing, assuming Rt = 0.9 and Rt = 0.

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Reported COVID-19 cases and associated mortality remain low in many sub-Saharan countries relative to global averages, but true impact is difficult to estimate given limitations around surveillance and mortality registration. In Lusaka, Zambia, burial registration and SARS-CoV-2 prevalence data during 2020 allow estimation of excess mortality and transmission. Relative to pre-pandemic patterns, we estimate age-dependent mortality increases, totalling 3212 excess deaths (95% CrI: 2104-4591), representing an 18.

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During the first months of the COVID-19 outbreak, countries adopted different strategies in order to mitigate the effects of the pandemic, ranging from recommendations to limit individual movement to severe lockdown measures. Regarding higher education, university studies were shifted to digital solutions in most countries. The sudden move to online teaching affected students differently, depending on the overall mitigation strategies applied.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines decreases over time, particularly against the Delta and Omicron variants, to help determine the need for booster shots.
  • It systematically reviews and analyzes data from numerous studies, assessing vaccine effectiveness (VE) against confirmed infections and symptoms post-vaccination.
  • Findings show that VE drops significantly to below 20% six months after the primary vaccination for Omicron, but booster shots can restore immunity to higher levels, though effectiveness starts to decline again nine months later.
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The worldwide inequitable access to vaccination claims for a re-assessment of policies that could minimize the COVID-19 burden in low-income countries. Nine months after the launch of the national vaccination program in March 2021, only 3.4% of the Ethiopian population received two doses of COVID-19 vaccine.

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