8 results on '"M Mazzoldi"'
Search Results
2. Standardized psychological evaluation pre- and posttransplantation: a new option
- Author
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A. Basile, M. Mazzoldi, G. Lovera, A Balistreri, Gabriele Cevenini, M. Carmellini, S Bernazzali, and Massimo Maccherini
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychometrics ,Waiting Lists ,Psychological intervention ,Sample (statistics) ,Disease cluster ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Patient Care Team ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,Mental Disorders ,Cognition ,Middle Aged ,Kidney Transplantation ,Surgery ,Psychological evaluation ,Italy ,Psychotic Disorders ,Heart Transplantation ,Female ,business ,Clinical psychology ,Psychopathology - Abstract
A multicenter study was undertaken involving three teams in Italy to obtain a homogeneous psychological evaluation of patients needing organ transplantations. After a preliminary formulation of a common questionnaire individualizing 22 items, yielding a final score from 0 to 44, 294 forms were analyzed for correlations between variables. The sample responses were related to individual variables as well as by cluster analysis to aggregate typical profiles. Clustering of variables was observed in three areas that showed two variables (no. 6, “ongoing psychotic disturbances” and no. 10 “drugs”) to be separate. Area 1 (“psychopathology”) highlights psychic disturbances, cognitive disorders, and unhealthy behavioral styles; area 2 (“anxia”) correlates anxious symptoms to pretransplant examinations and waiting time; area 3 (“depression”) ties personal emotional resources and affective factors. Cluster analysis of the sample identified four groups: Group 1 (16.6%) “at risk;” mean score 25.2 (range 16–31); Group 2 (21.7%) “intermediate—at risk,” mean score 32 (range 25–38); Group 3 (29.6%) “intermediate—ideal,” mean score 35.3 (range 26–40); and Group 4 (31.9%) “ideal candidate,” mean score 40.7 (range 36–44). The two “intermediate” groups were studied for mean values for area 1; namely, a cut-off value of 1.78 constituted a better or worse prognostic factor to assign the patient to either Group 2 or 3. Using a uniform method of psychological evaluation before transplantation reduced single operator subjectivity, obtaining comparable results in different transplant centers and allowing planning interventions for at-risk patients.
- Published
- 2005
3. STANDARDIZED PSYCOLOGICAL EVALUATION PRE AND POST TRANSPLANTATION: A NEW OPTION
- Author
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S Bernazzali, A Balistreri, M. Carmellini, G. Lovera, M. Mazzoldi, Gabriele Cevenini, and A. Basile
- Subjects
Transplantation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Medicine ,business ,Pre and post ,Surgery - Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The Impact of the SARS-CoV-2 Outbreak on the Psychological Flexibility and Behaviour of Cancelling Medical Appointments of Italian Patients with Pre-Existing Medical Condition: The "ImpACT-COVID-19 for Patients" Multi-Centre Observational Study.
- Author
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Deledda G, Riccardi N, Gori S, Poli S, Giansante M, Geccherle E, Mazzi C, Silva R, Desantis N, Giovannetti AM, Solari A, Confalonieri P, Grazzi L, Sarcletti E, Biffa G, Biagio AD, Sestito C, Keim R, Gangi Hermis AMRD, Mazzoldi M, Failo A, Scaglione A, Faldetta N, Dorangricchia P, Moschetto M, Soto Parra HJ, Faietti J, Profio AD, Rusconi S, Giacomelli A, Marchioretto F, Alongi F, Marchetta A, Molon G, Bisoffi Z, and Angheben A
- Subjects
- Disease Outbreaks, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Stress, Psychological epidemiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Appointments and Schedules, COVID-19 psychology, Patients psychology, Psychological Distress
- Abstract
Psychological distress imposed by the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak particularly affects patients with pre-existing medical conditions, and the progression of their diseases. Patients who fail to keep scheduled medical appointments experience a negative impact on care. The aim of this study is to investigate the psychosocial factors contributing to the cancellation of medical appointments during the pandemic by patients with pre-existing health conditions. Data were collected in eleven Italian hospitals during the last week of lockdown, and one month later. In order to assess the emotional impact of the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak and the subject's degree of psychological flexibility, we developed an ad hoc questionnaire (ImpACT), referring to the Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) model. The Impact of Event Scale-Revised (IES-R), the Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale (DASS) and the Cognitive Fusion Questionnaire (CFQ) were also used. Pervasive dysfunctional use of experiential avoidance behaviours (used with the function to avoid thought, emotions, sensations), feelings of loneliness and high post-traumatic stress scores were found to correlate with the fear of COVID-19, increasing the likelihood of cancelling medical appointments. Responding promptly to the information and psychological needs of patients who cancel medical appointments can have positive effects in terms of psychological and physical health.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Rehabilitation of endogenous task shift processes in closed head injury patients.
- Author
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Stablum F, Umiltà C, Mazzoldi M, Pastore N, and Magon S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Analysis of Variance, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Reaction Time, Reference Values, Task Performance and Analysis, Attention physiology, Head Injuries, Closed rehabilitation, Problem Solving physiology, Reactive Inhibition
- Abstract
This paper reports a study that was aimed to rehabilitate executive functions in CHI patients. When a subject is engaged in two speeded tasks, not simultaneously but with some form of alternation, the response is slower to an item of task A if it was preceded by an item of task B, than when it was preceded by an item of task A. This shift cost is small when subjects can prepare in advance for the new task (endogenous task shift), whereas the cost is much greater when preparation is not possible (exogenous task shift). The groups tested comprised 20 severe closed head injury (CHI) patients (10 who underwent treatment and 10 controls), 8 mild CHI patients, and 18 non-brain damaged (NBD) controls. In the present study, the shift cost was greater for severe CHI patients than for NBD controls. Treatment consisted of five sessions, in which an endogenous task shift paradigm was used. A significant reduction of the endogenous shift cost from assessment to retest was found. The reduction remained stable at the 4-month follow-up session. These results are not simply due to retesting, as the control patients did not show any improvement at retest. Interestingly, no reduction of exogenous task shift cost was found. The results showed also that the beneficial effect of the treatment generalises to other executive functions.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Standardized psychological evaluation pre- and posttransplantation: a new option.
- Author
-
Bernazzali S, Basile A, Balistreri A, Carmellini M, Cevenini G, Lovera G, Mazzoldi M, and Maccherini M
- Subjects
- Cluster Analysis, Female, Humans, Italy, Male, Mental Disorders classification, Middle Aged, Psychometrics methods, Psychotic Disorders classification, Surveys and Questionnaires, Heart Transplantation psychology, Kidney Transplantation psychology, Patient Care Team, Waiting Lists
- Abstract
A multicenter study was undertaken involving three teams in Italy to obtain a homogeneous psychological evaluation of patients needing organ transplantations. After a preliminary formulation of a common questionnaire individualizing 22 items, yielding a final score from 0 to 44, 294 forms were analyzed for correlations between variables. The sample responses were related to individual variables as well as by cluster analysis to aggregate typical profiles. Clustering of variables was observed in three areas that showed two variables (no. 6, "ongoing psychotic disturbances" and no. 10 "drugs") to be separate. Area 1 ("psychopathology") highlights psychic disturbances, cognitive disorders, and unhealthy behavioral styles; area 2 ("anxia") correlates anxious symptoms to pretransplant examinations and waiting time; area 3 ("depression") ties personal emotional resources and affective factors. Cluster analysis of the sample identified four groups: Group 1 (16.6%) "at risk;" mean score 25.2 (range 16-31); Group 2 (21.7%) "intermediate-at risk," mean score 32 (range 25-38); Group 3 (29.6%) "intermediate-ideal," mean score 35.3 (range 26-40); and Group 4 (31.9%) "ideal candidate," mean score 40.7 (range 36-44). The two "intermediate" groups were studied for mean values for area 1; namely, a cut-off value of 1.78 constituted a better or worse prognostic factor to assign the patient to either Group 2 or 3. Using a uniform method of psychological evaluation before transplantation reduced single operator subjectivity, obtaining comparable results in different transplant centers and allowing planning interventions for at-risk patients.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. [Psychological assistance in organ transplantation].
- Author
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Lovera G, Basile A, Bertolotti M, Comazzi AM, Clerici CA, Gandione M, Mazzoldi M, Rupolo G, Feltrin A, and Ponton P
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Family Health, Humans, Italy, Living Donors, Quality of Life, Organ Transplantation psychology, Postoperative Care, Preoperative Care
- Abstract
The aim of this report is introducing with a series of psychological, psychiatric and psychosocial problems, that can arise, at every point, in the procedure of organ transplantations. Different areas of intervention are considered: the assistance to the patients and their families during the pre- and post-operative periods; the evaluation of transplant recipients' quality of life; ethical and psychological problems of living kidney donation; psychosocial support to donors' families; the training of the intensive therapy units to entertain relationships with donors' relatives; the delicate psychological aspects of transplantation during childhood. The sense of awareness about these matters is growing in Italy too, and many initiatives of psychological and psychiatric help are being developed in collaboration with several transplantation centres.
- Published
- 2000
8. Attention and control deficits following closed head injury.
- Author
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Stablum F, Leonardi G, Mazzoldi M, Umiltà C, and Morra S
- Subjects
- Adult, Brain Mapping, Decision Making physiology, Discrimination, Psychological physiology, Female, Frontal Lobe physiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Photic Stimulation, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Reaction Time physiology, Attention physiology, Head Injuries, Closed psychology
- Abstract
This study was aimed at identifying the impaired attentional components in patients who had sustained a severe CHI several years before. A group of 14 CHI patients and a Control group (matched for age, sex and education) were tested. Experiment 1 used a dual-task paradigm (Umiltà et al., 1992). The double task-single task difference was greater for the CHI group, indicating a specific damage at a central executive stage where decision are made and responses are coordinated. Experiment 2 used a task-shifting paradigm (Morra and Roncato, 1986). The cost of shifting from one task to the other was greater for the CHI group, but only in the Short Series Condition where a new task-program could be pre-activated. Experiment 3 studied visual selective attention using Navon paradigm (1977); in this case, there was no difference between patients and controls.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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