29 results on '"Francescutti C"'
Search Results
2. Epidemiologia dei traumi gravi nella popolazione del Friuli-Venezia Giulia
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Lattuada L, Burba I, Francescutti C, Nardi G, Scian F, Michelutto V, Sanson G, Di Bartolomeo S., Lattuada, L, Burba, I, Francescutti, C, Nardi, G, Scian, F, Michelutto, V, Sanson, G, and Di Bartolomeo, S.
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Trauma grave ,epidemiologia ,registri - Abstract
Report epidemiologico sui traumi gravi in Friuli-Venezia Giulia
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- 2000
3. La valutazione della corrispondenza di due strumenti di misura: il caso della Val.Graf FVG versione residenziale e dell’International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health
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Baulino, F, Francescutti, C, Gongolo, F, and Palese, Alvisa
- Published
- 2010
4. [Organizational appropriateness of recoveries: results of the evaluation of recoveries by AEP/PRUO at the Careggi Hospital in Florence in 1995-1998]
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Trianni, G, Lavazza, L, Palazzi, Gp, Stella, F, Boccoli, E, Melani, A, Sestini, Piersante, Tomaiuolo, M, Monfardini, R, Rizzi, L, and Francescutti, C.
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hospital admissions ,public health ,Convalescence ,Length of Stay ,Efficiency, Organizational ,Health Services Misuse ,Hospitals, General ,Hospitalization ,PRUO ,Italy ,Utilization Review ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies - Abstract
The organizational appropriateness of hospital stays is an expression of a hospital's efficiency and aim of the management control. The AEP (American Version)/PRUO (Italian Version) protocol is specific for measuring the organizational appropriateness of hospital stays. The aim of this study is the comparative analysis of the organizational appropriateness of hospital stays in Careggi Hospital of Florence and in all hospital Departments in 1995 and 1998. In 1998 the AEP/PRUO protocol was applied to 2148 samples of hospital stays out of 38,968 eligible hospitalizations, and in 1995 a sample of 1989 hospital stays out of 35,108. In 1998 2,148 admissions and 15,338 days of hospitalization were tested. In 1995, 1989 admission days and 12,264 days of hospitalization were tested, 63 departments were studied. In 1995 the first edition of the protocol was applied, in 1998 the second. A sample of 218 of the 1998 hospital stays was tested with both editions to evaluate the impact of differences. In 1998, with the second edition of the protocol, the inappropriateness rate of admission days and hospitalization days and the rate of in-patients inappropriate hospital stays was respectively 38.0%, 43.8% and 18.5%. Compared with 1995 results, the rates increased +6.2%, 6% and +7.5% respectively. Instead, with the first edition of the protocol, the rates were 29.7%, 37.6% and 10.7% and, compared with 1995, they were reduced -2.1%, -0.6% and -0.3%. The longitudinal multilevel analysis has allowed the evaluation of the performance of each department.
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- 2002
5. The International Classification of Functioning Disability and Health, version for children and youth as a roadmap for projecting and programming rehabilitation in a neuropaediatric hospital unit
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Martinuzzi, A, primary, Salghetti, A, additional, Betto, S, additional, Russo, E, additional, Leonardi, M, additional, Raggi, A, additional, and Francescutti, C, additional
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- 2010
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6. Antibiotic prescription in Italian children: a population-based study in Friuli Venezia Giulia, north-east Italy
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Borgnolo, G, primary, Simon, G, additional, Francescutti, C, additional, Lattuada, L, additional, and Zanier, L, additional
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- 2007
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7. Disseminating the WHO International Classification of Functioning Health and Disability (ICF) in the Veneto region of Italy.
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Martinuzzi A, Frare M, Pradal M, Mion M, Dugone S, Durante M, Corò A, Francescutti C, and Leonardi M
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Purpose. To show the feasibility and effect of a large formation effort focused on the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), which may introduce a revolutionary new conceptual framework for people involved in rehabilitation services. Methods. We here describe the large information/formation project launched by the Regional Direction for Social Services of the Veneto region (Italy). Here we describe the first of the two steps of the project, aimed to reach 900 health professionals throughout the whole region. They were exposed to a structured modular course consisting of a mix of frontal lectures and workshop sessions. During the workshop sessions the participants were confronted with questions referring to the actual application of ICF in their services. Results. The results show that the attendance (90%) was very high. The workshop sessions provided interesting indications on the possible applications of ICF in the clinical settings, as well as points of strength and potential problems that the implementation of ICF may have in the Regional Health Service. Conclusions. To our knowledge this is the largest alphabetization effort on ICF attempted in a public health system, and it indicates a possible effective approach to its controlled diffusion and future implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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8. The impact of stroke in Italy: first step for a national burden of disease study.
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Francescutti C, Mariotti S, Simon G, D'Errigo P, and Di Bidino R
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Purpose: To calculate the impact of stroke in Italy in 1998, expressed in terms of disability adjusted life years (DALYs) according to the WHO Global Burden of Disease (GBD) Study.Method: The data on first-ever stroke incidence (FES), remission rate and case fatality derived from the health information system and a research on post-FES disability of the Friuli Venezia-Giulia (FVG) Region, were used to compute the years of life lived with disability (YLDs), which were added to the years of life lost due to premature mortality (YLLs), calculated from stroke mortality data, to obtain the DALYs. The results were extrapolated to the rest of Italy after examination of national stroke registries data.Results: Standardized estimated incidence of FES in FVG in 1998 was lower (135 cases of FES per 100 000 inhabitants) than that reported in other published national and international studies. Estimated case fatality rate and distribution of post-FES disability did not differ from other similar studies. About 100 000 YLLs and 273 000 YLDs due to FES were estimated in 1998 for Italy.Conclusions: The estimated proportion of the YLDs on total DALYs (27%) is comparable with that obtained in the EURO-A group (the European area including Italy) of the GBD 2000 Study (31%), and the Australian BoD Study (35%). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
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9. Antibiotic prescription in italian children: a population-based study in Friuli Venezia Giulia, north-east Italy.
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Borgnolo, G, Simon, G, Francescutti, C, Lattuada, L, and Zanier, L
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ANTIBIOTICS ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Unlabelled: Comprehensive information on prescription patterns of antibiotics in Italy is scarce. This study describes the use of systemic antibiotics in children according to age and sex in Friuli Venezia Giulia, north-east Italy. A pharmacological prescription database was used to identify individual prescriptions provided to all 0-15-y-old resident children (n = 140,630) during 1998. Overall, 124,383 prescriptions were identified. The prescription rate was highest in the 3-6 y olds, with 1491 antibiotic prescriptions per 1,000 children per year. Antibiotics were prescribed for 52% of infants, 57.2% of toddlers and 62% of preschool children. Twenty-nine percent of the prescriptions were for cephalosporins, 27% for macrolides and 24% for broad-spectrum penicillins. Prescription rates were much higher than in other countries such as Denmark, with more antibiotic courses prescribed for more children at all ages. Prescriptions from general practitioners and family paediatricians often included second-line antibiotics (e.g. cephalosporins and macrolides) or antibiotics that have not been approved for community-acquired paediatric infections (e.g. quinolones).Conclusion: The development of regional guidelines for antibiotic use in children should be urgently recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2001
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10. Organizational appropriateness of recoveries: results of the evaluation of recoveries by AEP/PRUO at the Careggi Hospital in Florence in 1995-1998,Appropriatezza organizzativa dei ricoveri: risultati della valutazione con AEP/PRUO dei ricoveri dell'AO Careggi di Firenze. Anni 1995 e 1998
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Trianni, G., Lavazza, L., Palazzi, G. P., Stella, F., Boccoli, E., Melani, A., Sestini, P., Tomaiuolo, M., Monfardini, R., laura Rizzi, and Francescutti, C.
11. Validation of the 'World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule, WHODAS-2' in patients with chronic diseases
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Burger Helena, Svetskova Olga, Cieza Alarcos, Alonso Jordi, Vilagut Gemma, Chatterji Somnath, Nieto Marta, Almansa Josué, Ayuso-Mateos Jose, Garin Olatz, Racca Vittorio, Francescutti Carlo, Vieta Eduard, Kostanjsek Nenad, Raggi Alberto, Leonardi Matilde, and Ferrer Montse
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background The WHODAS-2 is a disability assessment instrument based on the conceptual framework of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health (ICF). It provides a global measure of disability and 7 domain-specific scores. The aim of this study was to assess WHODAS-2 conceptual model and metric properties in a set of chronic and prevalent clinical conditions accounting for a wide scope of disability in Europe. Methods 1,119 patients with one of 13 chronic conditions were recruited in 7 European centres. Participants were clinically evaluated and administered the WHODAS-2 and the SF-36 at baseline, 6 weeks and 3 months of follow-up. The latent structure was explored and confirmed by factor analysis (FA). Reliability was assessed in terms of internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha) and reproducibility (intra-class correlation coefficients, ICC). Construct validity was evaluated by correlating the WHODAS-2 and SF-36 domains, and comparing known groups based on the clinical-severity and work status. Effect size (ES) coefficient was used to assess responsiveness. To assess reproducibility and responsiveness, subsamples of stable (at 6 weeks) and improved (after 3 moths) patients were defined, respectively, according to changes in their clinical-severity. Results The satisfactory FA goodness of fit indexes confirmed a second order factor structure with 7 dimensions, and a global score for the WHODAS-2. Cronbach's alpha ranged from 0.77 (self care) to 0.98 (life activities: work or school), and the ICC was lower, but achieved the recommended standard of 0.7 for four domains. Correlations between global WHODAS-2 score and the different domains of the SF-36 ranged from -0.29 to -0.65. Most of the WHODAS-2 scores showed statistically significant differences among clinical-severity groups for all pathologies, and between working patients and those not working due to ill health (p < 0.001). Among the subsample of patients who had improved, responsiveness coefficients were small to moderate (ES = 0.3-0.7), but higher than those of the SF-36. Conclusions The latent structure originally designed by WHODAS-2 developers has been confirmed for the first time, and it has shown good metric properties in clinic and rehabilitation samples. Therefore, considerable support is provided to the WHODAS-2 utilization as an international instrument to measure disability based on the ICF model.
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- 2010
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12. Validation of the "World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule, WHODAS-2" in patients with chronic diseases.
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Garin O, Ayuso-Mateos JL, Almansa J, Nieto M, Chatterji S, Vilagut G, Alonso J, Cieza A, Svetskova O, Burger H, Racca V, Francescutti C, Vieta E, Kostanjsek N, Raggi A, Leonardi M, Ferrer M, MHADIE Consortium, Garin, Olatz, and Ayuso-Mateos, Jose Luis
- Abstract
Background: The WHODAS-2 is a disability assessment instrument based on the conceptual framework of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health (ICF). It provides a global measure of disability and 7 domain-specific scores. The aim of this study was to assess WHODAS-2 conceptual model and metric properties in a set of chronic and prevalent clinical conditions accounting for a wide scope of disability in Europe.Methods: 1,119 patients with one of 13 chronic conditions were recruited in 7 European centres. Participants were clinically evaluated and administered the WHODAS-2 and the SF-36 at baseline, 6 weeks and 3 months of follow-up. The latent structure was explored and confirmed by factor analysis (FA). Reliability was assessed in terms of internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha) and reproducibility (intra-class correlation coefficients, ICC). Construct validity was evaluated by correlating the WHODAS-2 and SF-36 domains, and comparing known groups based on the clinical-severity and work status. Effect size (ES) coefficient was used to assess responsiveness. To assess reproducibility and responsiveness, subsamples of stable (at 6 weeks) and improved (after 3 moths) patients were defined, respectively, according to changes in their clinical-severity.Results: The satisfactory FA goodness of fit indexes confirmed a second order factor structure with 7 dimensions, and a global score for the WHODAS-2. Cronbach's alpha ranged from 0.77 (self care) to 0.98 (life activities: work or school), and the ICC was lower, but achieved the recommended standard of 0.7 for four domains. Correlations between global WHODAS-2 score and the different domains of the SF-36 ranged from -0.29 to -0.65. Most of the WHODAS-2 scores showed statistically significant differences among clinical-severity groups for all pathologies, and between working patients and those not working due to ill health (p < 0.001). Among the subsample of patients who had improved, responsiveness coefficients were small to moderate (ES = 0.3-0.7), but higher than those of the SF-36.Conclusions: The latent structure originally designed by WHODAS-2 developers has been confirmed for the first time, and it has shown good metric properties in clinic and rehabilitation samples. Therefore, considerable support is provided to the WHODAS-2 utilization as an international instrument to measure disability based on the ICF model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
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13. Italian ICF training programs: describing and promoting human functioning and research.
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Francescutti C, Fusaro G, Leonardi M, Martinuzzi A, Sala M, Russo E, Frare M, Pradal M, Zampogna D, Cosentino A, and Raggi A
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Purpose of the article is to report on 5 years of ICF training experiences in Italy aimed at promoting a consistent approach to ICF's field application. More than 7000 persons participated in around 150 training events: almost half were organised by political bodies, at national, regional or local level, directly linked to implementation experiences. Few training events were organised by the school sector, while training commissioned by NGOs represent a relevant area and, in our opinion, constitute the first step towards a full inclusion of persons with disabilities. Central pillars of our training modules are: the inclusion of all ICF components in the description of functional profiles, the need of providing brief theoretical background information before moving to practical aspects and the importance of providing personalised face to face training modules, in contrast to self-administered learning modules, or web-based protocols. On the basis of our experience, we can conclude that training's objectives are generally reached: trainees improved their knowledge of the ICF and its related tools, and are able to begin practical applications in their contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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14. Eight years of ICF in Italy: principles, results and future perspectives.
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Francescutti C, Martinuzzi A, Leonardi M, and Kostanjsek NFI
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Purpose.To report on the process of implementation and dissemination of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) [1] in Italy. Methods.The Agenzia Regionale della Sanità of Friuli Venezia Giulia Region (ARSFVG) is a WHO Collaborating Centre for the Family of International Classifications. It collaborated with Italian research institutions such as the C. Besta Neurological Institute IRCCS Foundation, the Medea Institute, and the National Institute of Statistics in revising, field testing and validating the ICF in Italy and in the preparation of ICF-CY (Children and Youth Version). Results.The value of ICF profiles in defining personalised programmes of interventions was explored by evaluating the link between ICF items and the UN Convention, which was taken as a criterion of clear ethical and political orientation in the evaluation of the disability condition. The first and main effort of ICF implementation was directed in the field of public health and welfare policies. Two main nationwide projects were launched: ICF and the labour polices in 2003 and ICF and the disability certification reforms in 2006. ICF also received a strong attention by the professional working in the school system, and was used to define the functioning profile of children and to establish personalised educational programmes. Conclusions.The implementation of ICF in Italy was strongly facilitated by a favourable cultural and scientific context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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15. Towards a common disability assessment framework: theoretical and methodological issues for providing public services and benefits using ICF.
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Francescutti C, Frattura L, Troiano R, Gongolo F, Martinuzzi A, Sala M, Meucci P, Raggi A, Russo E, Buffoni M, Gorini G, Conclave M, Petrangeli A, Solipaca A, and Leonardi M
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Purpose.To report on the preliminary results of an Italian project on the implementation of an ICF-based protocol for providing public services and benefits for persons with disabilities. Methods.The UN Convention on the Rights of persons with disabilities (UNC) was mapped to the ICF, and core elements were implemented in an ICF-based evaluation protocol. A person-environment interaction classification (PEIC) tree was also developed for defining evaluation outputs. Results.The PEIC and the ICF-based protocol are the guideline and the data interpretation source, respectively, for providing public services and benefits. They enable to assign persons to different services, from surveillance and monitoring to facilitator provision or sustain over time, to barrier removal or to the reorganisation of environmental factors provision. A detailed description of the target intervention is made available through the implementation of a protocol, which points out the effect of personal support and other environmental factors. Conclusions.The detailed description of functioning and disability provided by our methodology can help policy makers and administrators in decision making, on the basis of a description of real needs, and in targeting person-tailored interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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16. Moving towards ICF use for monitoring the UN Convention on the rights of persons with disabilities: the Italian experience.
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Griffo G, Leonardi M, Martinuzzi A, Francescutti C, Raggi A, Kosic V, and Barbieri PV
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- 2009
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17. Mortality associated with delay in operation after hip fracture... but Italian data seem to contradict study findings.
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Franzo A, Simon G, and Francescutti C
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- 2006
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18. Epidemiology of major injury in the population of Friuli Venezia Giulia-Italy
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Giuseppe Nardi, Gianfranco Sanson, Carlo Francescutti, Stefano Di Bartolomeo, Ivana Burba, Luca Lattuada, Vanni Michelutto, Franca Scian, Di Bartolomeo, S, Sanson, G, Michelutto, V, Nardi, G, Burba, Ivana, Francescutti, C, Lattuada, L, and Scian, F.
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Registrie ,Male ,Trauma centres ,Emergency Medical Services ,Time Factors ,Epidemiology ,Poison control ,Occupational safety and health ,Injury Severity Score ,Medicine ,Registries ,Outcome and process assessment ,Hospital Mortality ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Child ,General Environmental Science ,education.field_of_study ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Accidents ,Mortality ,Trauma severity indices ,Wounds and injuries ,Incidence ,Middle Aged ,Trauma centre ,Italy ,Female ,Medical emergency ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Population ,Injury prevention ,Humans ,education ,Aged ,business.industry ,Emergency Medical Service ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,Accident ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Wounds and Injuries ,business ,Trauma severity indice ,Demography - Abstract
Objective: To provide reliable and comparable information on major injury (MIJ) (Injury Severity Score (ISS)>15) by establishing a comprehensive and Utstein-style compliant registry of all occurrences in a defined geographical area. Methods: Prospective, population-based, 12-month study targeting the 1,200,000 inhabitants of the Italian region Friuli Venezia Giulia (FVG). Deliberate self-harm was excluded. Results: The total number of MIJ cases was 627, the resulting incidence 522 per million per year. Trauma was mostly blunt (98.4%). Young (15-44 years) adults (54.8%) and males (78.6%) were most affected. Leading mechanisms of injury were traffic accidents (81%) and falls (9.1%). Most events occurred in rural (80.9%) areas despite one third of the regional population living in major urban centres. Summer and weekends carried the highest frequency. The mean ISS (n=455) was 30.0, median 25. On-scene vital parameters were often subnormal, e.g. 53.9%, GCS
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- 2003
19. Reframing QoL assessment in persons with neurodevelopmental disorders.
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Bertelli M, Francescutti C, and Brown I
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- Adult, Autism Spectrum Disorder psychology, Child, Humans, Intellectual Disability psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Neurodevelopmental Disorders psychology, Quality of Life
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The paper reviews the international literature on quality of life (QoL) for persons with neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD) in order to define the theoretical frame for optimal assessment. The application of the QoL approach to assessment procedures should be based on three main aspects: shared QoL, personal QoL and family QoL. The first aspect refers to characteristics of individual life that are shared with other people. The second aspect proceeds from the fact that each individual has a changing set of personal attributes that determine the subjective experience of life. In the third aspect the previous two are applied to the family that includes a person with NDD. Disability impacts the whole family and the determination of appropriate conceptualization of family outcomes requires an understanding of the impact of members with a disability on family QoL. At any level, it seems best to take a comprehensive approach to assessing QoL, integrating subjective and objective aspects, self-reports and hetero-evaluations. The QoL approach is above all a way to explore the rich intricacies of personal quality of life. Such assessment may be used effectively with people with NDD, independently from the severity of their functioning impairment. Individuals with profound ID may express their inner states through consistent behavioural repertoires, which can be discerned by persons closest to them and validated by more independent others. Attention must be paid in using non-generic instruments, such as those that measure health-related QoL. Although they do focus on the individual person, they still support a theoretical perspective of QoL that has not departed significantly from the traditional medical approach. Currently available generic tools, although they have some common conceptual and evaluation characteristics, still show considerable differences in the areas to be included in "shared QoL", the dimensions used to evaluate "Individual QoL", and the role attributed to indicators of QoL. QoL assessment should not represent a classification of individuals, services or systems, but it should help provide, within service systems and organizations, a value system that is consistent with those values held by people with NDD.
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- 2020
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20. Semantic aspects of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health: towards sharing knowledge and unifying information.
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Andronache AS, Simoncello A, Della Mea V, Daffara C, and Francescutti C
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- Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Male, Program Evaluation, Semantics, World Health Organization, Disability Evaluation, Disabled Persons classification, Disabled Persons rehabilitation, Information Dissemination methods, International Classification of Diseases, Medical Informatics standards
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During the last decade, under the World Health Organization's direction, the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) has become a reference tool for monitoring and developing various policies addressing people with disability. This article presents three steps to increase the semantic interoperability of ICF: first, the representation of ICF using ontology tools; second, the alignment to upper-level ontologies; and third, the use of these tools to implement semantic mappings between ICF and other tools, such as disability assessment instruments, health classifications, and at least partially formalized terminologies.
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- 2012
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21. UN convention on the rights of persons with disability, eligibility criteria and the International Classification of Functioning Disability and Health.
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Francescutti C
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- Eligibility Determination, Humans, Italy, United Nations, Disability Evaluation, Disabled Persons classification, Disabled Persons legislation & jurisprudence, Human Rights legislation & jurisprudence, International Classification of Diseases
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- 2011
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22. Description of the person-environment interaction: methodological issues and empirical results of an Italian large-scale disability assessment study using an ICF-based protocol.
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Francescutti C, Gongolo F, Simoncello A, and Frattura L
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Child, Preschool, Empirical Research, Female, Humans, Infant, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Terminology as Topic, Young Adult, Disability Evaluation, Disabled Persons, Environment, International Classification of Diseases, Social Environment
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Background: There is a connection between the definition of disability in a person-environment framework, the development of appropriate assessment strategies and instruments, and the logic underpinning the organization of benefits and services to confront disability., Methods: The Italian Ministry of Health and Ministry of Labor and Social Policies supported a three-year project for the definition of a common framework and a standardised protocol for disability evaluation based on ICF. The research agenda of the project identified 6 phases: 1) adoption of a definition of disability; 2) analytical breakdown of the contents of disability definition, so as to indicate as clearly as possible the core information essential to guide the evaluation process; 3) definition of a data collection protocol; 4) national implementation of the protocol and collection of approximately 1,000 profiles; 5) proposal of a profile analysis and definition of groups of cases with similar functioning profiles; 6) trial of the proposal with the collected data. The data was analyzed in different ways: descriptive analysis, application of the person-environment interactions classification tree, and cluster analysis., Results: A sample of 1,051 persons from 8 Italian regions was collected that represented different functioning conditions in all the phases of the life cycle. The aggregate result of the person-environment interactions was summarized. The majority of activities resulted with no problems in all of the A&P chapters. Nearly 50.000 facilitators codes were opened. The main frequent facilitators were family members, health and social professionals, assistive devices and both health and social systems, services and politics. The focus of the person-environment interaction evaluation was on the A&P domains, differentiating those in which performance presented limitations and restrictions from those in which performance had no or light limitations and restrictions. Communication(d3) and Learning and Applying Knowledge(d1) appeared as the more problematic A&P areas. Self Care(d5) was the domain in which facilitators were more effective in supporting functioning, suggesting that the Italian welfare system is mainly focused on providing care services for activities of daily living, jointly with the family. The cluster analysis was limited to those categories that were common to all age classes (38 categories out of 55). For a final representation, a solution with 6 clusters was chosen., Conclusions: An example is provided of how it is possible to plan empirical studies in which theoretical advances and operative goals on disability in a person-environment framework can support the definition of a research design, measurement strategies, and data analysis. The description of functioning and disability at population level is no more based on individual deficits or limitations. Personal profiles may be elaborated and groups created based on the characteristics of the person-environment interactions. Personal profiles may also be used as a "rationale" for defining personalized intervention programs.
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- 2011
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23. [The evaluation of the correspondence of two systems of measurement: the case of Val.Graf FVG Residential Version and International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health].
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Baulino F, Francescutti C, Gongolo F, and Palese A
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- Aged, Humans, Disability Evaluation, Geriatric Assessment, Health Status
- Abstract
Objective: to study the links between the Val.Graf.FVG form and the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF). The Val.Graf.FVG form is a tool for a multidimensional evaluation of elderly people resident or with health domicile in Friuli Venezia Giulia and living in a care home., Design: a qualitative analysis of the links between Val.Graf.FVG and ICF was performed following the mapping rules recommended by the literature. The links were searched for, with the support of a database, by two independent researchers expert in ICF and Val.Graf.FVG, respectively. When disagreement was present, a third researcher expert in ICF was involved., Main Outcome Measures: we searched for semantic links, semantic fields that cannot be linked and ICF constructs to which Val.Graf .FVG items refer to., Results: 186 items out of 207 (89.9%) of the Val.Graf. FVG form could be semantically linked to 156 ICF categories. 21 items (10.1%) could not be linked. When looking at the constructs, it appears that while ICF assesses the level of functioning of an individual through four components (functions, structures, activity and participation, and environmental factors) put into operation by qualifiers (for example, capacity, performance), the Val.Graf.FVG form assesses the levels of autonomy and the quantity of personal and technological support needed by the elderly living in a care home., Conclusions: the mapping methodology accurately evaluates the characteristics and the conceptual structure of the measurement tools documented in the literature and/or used in care practice, facilitating their comparison. The analytical analysis of the items and constructs of the Val.Graf. FVG form confirmed that the aim of this tool is the definition of the support needed by an individual, while no information on his/her functioning level is given. Thus, the Val.Graf. FVG form should be used only to understand the quantity of resources necessary to assist elderly people living in a care home.
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- 2010
24. Integrating research into policy planning: MHADIE policy recommendations.
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Leonardi M, Chatterji S, Ayuso-Mateos JL, Hollenweger J, Ustün B, Kostanjsek NF, Newton A, Björck-Åkesson E, Francescutti C, Alonso J, Matucci M, Samoilescu A, Good A, Cieza A, Svestkova O, Bullinger M, Marincek C, Burger H, Raggi A, and Bickenbach JE
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- Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Education, Europe, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Longitudinal Studies, Public Policy, Research, Transportation, Disability Evaluation, Disabled Persons, Health Policy
- Abstract
MHADIE project (Measuring Health and Disability in Europe: Supporting policy development) aimed at developing realistic, evidence-based and effective national policies for persons with disabilities. A preliminary step towards this goal was the demonstration on the feasibility of employing the ICF in clinical, educational and statistical fields, which corresponds to the recognised need to enhance the European Union's capacity of analysis of disability, as highlighted in its Disability Action Plan 2006-2007. The ultimate outcome of the project is the production of 13 policy recommendations, dealing with statistics clinical and educational areas, and four general policy recommendations focusing on: (a) the need of coordinating and integrating disability conceptualization at all policy levels and across sectors; (b) the need of conducting longitudinal cohort studies which include children aged 0-6; (c) the need of reviewing transportation policies in light of the requirements of persons with disabilities; (d) the need of reviewing all disability policies to emphasise and support the role of the family, which is a consistent and substantial environmental facilitator in the lives of persons with disabilities.
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- 2010
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25. Risk factors correlated with post-operative mortality for hip fracture surgery in the elderly: a population-based approach.
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Franzo A, Francescutti C, and Simon G
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- Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cohort Studies, Comorbidity, Female, Humans, Male, Postoperative Period, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Sex Factors, Hip Fractures mortality, Hip Fractures surgery, Hospital Mortality
- Abstract
Objectives: To estimate the effect of waiting time for surgery and volume of surgical activity on mortality in patients with hip fracture and to compare risk-adjusted outcomes between hospitals providing surgery for such patients., Design: Retrospective cohort study., Setting: Friuli Venezia Giulia, Italy., Participants: A total of 6,629 elderly people who underwent surgery for hip fracture between 1st January 1996 and 31th December 2000., Main Outcome Measures: In-hospital, 6-month and 1-year mortality rate., Results: In-hospital mortality rate was 5.4%. At six months, the mortality rate was 20.0%, and at 1 year 25.3%. Age, male sex, and comorbidity were significant predictors of mortality. Logistic regression analysis indicated that, after controlling for main patients risk factors and taking into account the hospital level variability, there was no significant association between increase in mortality rate and more than 1 day of waiting time for surgery (OR 0.90; 95% CI 0.58-1.40 for in-hospital mortality). One hospital had a significantly higher mortality rate than the others; high hospital volume for hip fracture surgery was associated with worse outcomes (OR 1.57; 95% CI 1.38-1.78 for in-hospital mortality). Mortality after hip fracture decreased significantly from 1996 to 2000 (OR 0.85; 95% CI 0.80-0.90)., Conclusions: Longer waiting time for surgery was not associated with mortality after adjusting for patient risk factors, and taking into account hospital level variability. Hospital level variability was statistically significant, and was partially explained by the total volume of hospital surgical activity. The decrease in mortality between 1996 and 2000 was confirmed by multivariate models.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Epidemiology of major injury in the population of Friuli Venezia Giulia-Italy.
- Author
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Di Bartolomeo S, Sanson G, Michelutto V, Nardi G, Burba I, Francescutti C, Lattuada L, and Scian F
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Emergency Medical Services statistics & numerical data, Female, Hospital Mortality, Humans, Incidence, Injury Severity Score, Italy epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Survival Analysis, Time Factors, Wounds and Injuries etiology, Wounds and Injuries epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To provide reliable and comparable information on major injury (MIJ) (Injury Severity Score (ISS) > 15) by establishing a comprehensive and Utstein-style compliant registry of all occurrences in a defined geographical area., Methods: Prospective, population-based, 12-month study targeting the 1,200,000 inhabitants of the Italian region Friuli Venezia Giulia (FVG). Deliberate self-harm was excluded., Results: The total number of MIJ cases was 627, the resulting incidence 522 per million per year. Trauma was mostly blunt (98.4%). Young (15-44 years) adults (54.8%) and males (78.6%) were most affected. Leading mechanisms of injury were traffic accidents (81%) and falls (9.1%). Most events occurred in rural (80.9%) areas despite one third of the regional population living in major urban centres. Summer and weekends carried the highest frequency. The mean ISS ( n = 455 ) was 30.0, median 25. On-scene vital parameters were often subnormal, e.g. 53.9%, GCS < 14. The Emergency Medical System was nearly always activated (98.4%). The time intervals were within standards although in part susceptible of improvement. The percentage of direct triage to the definitive hospital was 79.8%. Overall mortality was 45.6% or 238 per million per year. Most fatalities were found already dead (171/300) and no trimodal distribution was verified. Only 1.5% of the patients found alive died outside hospital. Mean GOS was 4.4 +/- 1 (S.D.), median 5., Conclusion: A considerable amount of information on MIJ in FVG has been gathered, of both local and general interest because it can help to assess the local trauma system and also, given the relative scarcity of prospective, population-based information on MIJ, contribute to scientific research.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. [Organizational appropriateness of recoveries: results of the evaluation of recoveries by AEP/PRUO at the Careggi Hospital in Florence in 1995-1998].
- Author
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Trianni G, Lavazza L, Palazzi GP, Stella F, Boccoli E, Melani A, Sestini P, Tomaiuolo M, Monfardini R, Rizzi L, and Francescutti C
- Subjects
- Efficiency, Organizational, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Humans, Italy, Longitudinal Studies, Utilization Review, Convalescence, Health Services Misuse statistics & numerical data, Hospitals, General statistics & numerical data, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
The organizational appropriateness of hospital stays is an expression of a hospital's efficiency and aim of the management control. The AEP (American Version)/PRUO (Italian Version) protocol is specific for measuring the organizational appropriateness of hospital stays. The aim of this study is the comparative analysis of the organizational appropriateness of hospital stays in Careggi Hospital of Florence and in all hospital Departments in 1995 and 1998. In 1998 the AEP/PRUO protocol was applied to 2148 samples of hospital stays out of 38,968 eligible hospitalizations, and in 1995 a sample of 1989 hospital stays out of 35,108. In 1998 2,148 admissions and 15,338 days of hospitalization were tested. In 1995, 1989 admission days and 12,264 days of hospitalization were tested, 63 departments were studied. In 1995 the first edition of the protocol was applied, in 1998 the second. A sample of 218 of the 1998 hospital stays was tested with both editions to evaluate the impact of differences. In 1998, with the second edition of the protocol, the inappropriateness rate of admission days and hospitalization days and the rate of in-patients inappropriate hospital stays was respectively 38.0%, 43.8% and 18.5%. Compared with 1995 results, the rates increased +6.2%, 6% and +7.5% respectively. Instead, with the first edition of the protocol, the rates were 29.7%, 37.6% and 10.7% and, compared with 1995, they were reduced -2.1%, -0.6% and -0.3%. The longitudinal multilevel analysis has allowed the evaluation of the performance of each department.
- Published
- 2001
28. [Delivery care and appropriate technologies: an analysis of rates of cesarean section in Friuli-Venezia Giulia in 1992-1993].
- Author
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Capasso M, Francescutti C, Lattuada L, Simon G, and Tosolini G
- Subjects
- Adult, Birth Weight, Confidence Intervals, Female, Gestational Age, Hospitals, Maternity statistics & numerical data, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Italy, Logistic Models, Maternal Age, Odds Ratio, Pregnancy, Cesarean Section statistics & numerical data
- Published
- 1996
29. [Variation in drug prescription costs and general practitioners in an area of North-East Italy. The use of current data].
- Author
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Simon G, Francescutti C, Brusin S, and Rosa F
- Subjects
- Aged, Humans, Italy, Middle Aged, Workforce, Drug Prescriptions economics, Primary Health Care
- Abstract
In this paper we analyse all General Practitioners (GP) prescriptions in a Friuli-Venezia Giulia area (North-eastern Italy). The sample included of 181 GPs and 242,564 patients with 1,191,122 prescribed items. The regional Health Data Base is the source of all data. Data analysis was performed according to the multiple regression and LISREL models. We assessed for all GPs the years of medical profession, patients listed, percent of patients exent from prescription rates, patients over 60, number of active compounds prescribed and related drug companies. Two factors, the number of active compounds prescribed and patients listed, significantly contributed to the multiple regression model. The model explained 56% of variation in prescribing pointing out the importance of those factors in influencing the cost per patient. LISREL model shows a causal chain going from the years of medical profession to cost per patient passing through the number of active compounds and drug companies related. In fact, the older the GP the less the cost per patient and number of active compounds used. A main finding is that the cost per patient is highly influenced by the number of different active compounds prescribed. As in other studies the percent of patients exent from prescriptions rates and aged over 60 are somehow fundamental in influencing the cost per patient. Finally we discussed models and literature on the issue.
- Published
- 1994
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