6 results on '"Tombola, V"'
Search Results
2. Feasibility and preliminary efficacy of brief tele-psychotherapy for COVID-19 patients and their first-degree relatives
- Author
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Biagianti, B, Lisi, I, Di Liberto, A, Turtulici, N, Foti, G, Zito, S, Ginex, V, Fornoni, C, Gallo, F, Cantu, F, Tombola, V, Di Fede, V, Rossetti, M, Colombo, E, Stocchetti, N, Zanier, E, Bellani, M, Bressi, C, Brambilla, P, Biagianti B., Lisi I., Di Liberto A., Turtulici N., Foti G., Zito S., Ginex V., Fornoni C., Gallo F., Cantu F., Tombola V., Di Fede V., Rossetti M. G., Colombo E., Stocchetti N., Zanier E. R., Bellani M., Bressi C., Brambilla P., Biagianti, B, Lisi, I, Di Liberto, A, Turtulici, N, Foti, G, Zito, S, Ginex, V, Fornoni, C, Gallo, F, Cantu, F, Tombola, V, Di Fede, V, Rossetti, M, Colombo, E, Stocchetti, N, Zanier, E, Bellani, M, Bressi, C, Brambilla, P, Biagianti B., Lisi I., Di Liberto A., Turtulici N., Foti G., Zito S., Ginex V., Fornoni C., Gallo F., Cantu F., Tombola V., Di Fede V., Rossetti M. G., Colombo E., Stocchetti N., Zanier E. R., Bellani M., Bressi C., and Brambilla P.
- Abstract
Background: The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic compromised the mental health of COVID-19 patients and their family members. Due to social distancing and lockdown measures, a remote, tele-psychotherapy program for former or current COVID-19 patients and their relatives was implemented. Objective: The primary goal of this project was to evaluate intervention feasibility. The secondary aim was to assess the impact of the intervention by means of pre-post psychological changes. Methods: After a phone-based eligibility screening and remote neuropsychological testing, participants completed online self-reports assessing baseline COVID-related psychopathology. Next, participants attended eight tele-psychotherapy sessions. After treatment, the online self-reports were completed again. Results: Of 104 enrolled participants, 88 completed the intervention (84.6 % completion rate). Significant pre-post improvements were observed for generalized anxiety (d = 0.38), depression (d = 0.37), insomnia (d = 0.43), post-traumatic psychopathology (d = 0.54), and general malaise (d = 0.31). Baseline cluster analysis revealed a subgroup of 41 subjects (47.6 %) with no psychopathology, and a second subgroup of 45 subject (52.3 %) with moderate severity. Thirty-three percent of the second group reached full symptom remission, while 66 % remained symptomatic after treatment. Conclusions: Remote brief tele-psychotherapy for COVID-19 patients and their first-degree relatives is feasible and preliminary efficacious at reducing COVID-related psychopathology in a subgroup of patients. Further research is needed to investigate distinct profiles of treatment response.
- Published
- 2023
3. Psychotherapeutic and Psychiatric Intervention in Patients With COVID-19 and Their Relatives: Protocol for the DigiCOVID Trial
- Author
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Cantù, F, Biagianti, B, Lisi, I, Zanier, E, Bottino, N, Fornoni, C, Gallo, F, Ginex, V, Tombola, V, Zito, S, Colombo, E, Stocchetti, N, Brambilla, P, Cantù, Filippo, Biagianti, Bruno, Lisi, Ilaria, Zanier, Elisa, Bottino, Nicola, Fornoni, Chiara, Gallo, Francesca, Ginex, Valeria, Tombola, Valentina, Zito, Silvana, Colombo, Elisa, Stocchetti, Nino, Brambilla, Paolo, Cantù, F, Biagianti, B, Lisi, I, Zanier, E, Bottino, N, Fornoni, C, Gallo, F, Ginex, V, Tombola, V, Zito, S, Colombo, E, Stocchetti, N, Brambilla, P, Cantù, Filippo, Biagianti, Bruno, Lisi, Ilaria, Zanier, Elisa, Bottino, Nicola, Fornoni, Chiara, Gallo, Francesca, Ginex, Valeria, Tombola, Valentina, Zito, Silvana, Colombo, Elisa, Stocchetti, Nino, and Brambilla, Paolo
- Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic is negatively impacting the mental health of both patients with COVID-19 and the general population. As current guidelines are limiting in-person contacts to reduce the spread of the virus, the development of a digital approach to implement in psychiatric and psychological consultations is needed. In this paper, we present the DigiCOVID protocol, a digital approach to offer remote, personalized psychological and psychiatric support to former or current patients with COVID-19 and their relatives. Objective: The main goal of this project is to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and usability of the DigiCOVID protocol. Furthermore, we also aim to assess the impact of the abovementioned protocol by means of pre-post changes in psychological clinical variables. Methods: Participants undergo an initial telephonic screening to ensure inclusion criteria are met. Secondly, participants complete a video-assisted neuropsychological IQ test as well as web-based self-reports of health and general well-being. Participants are then assigned to a psychotherapist who offers 8 teletherapy sessions. At the end of the therapy cycle, the web-based questionnaires are administered for a posttreatment evaluation. Results: As of April 2022, we enrolled a total of 122 participants, of which 94 have completed neuropsychological tests and web-based questionnaires. Conclusions: Our study aims at testing the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of DigiCOVID, a remote telemedicine protocol for the improvement of psychological and psychiatric health in patients with COVID-19 and their relatives. To date, the approach used seems to be feasible and highly customizable to patients' needs, and therefore, the DigiCOVID protocol might pave the way for future telepsychiatry-based interventions.
- Published
- 2022
4. Psychotherapeutic and Psychiatric Intervention in Patients With COVID-19 and Their Relatives: Protocol for the DigiCOVID Trial
- Author
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Filippo Cantù, Bruno Biagianti, Ilaria Lisi, Elisa R Zanier, Nicola Bottino, Chiara Fornoni, Francesca Gallo, Valeria Ginex, Valentina Tombola, Silvana Zito, Elisa Colombo, Nino Stocchetti, Paolo Brambilla, Cantù, F, Biagianti, B, Lisi, I, Zanier, E, Bottino, N, Fornoni, C, Gallo, F, Ginex, V, Tombola, V, Zito, S, Colombo, E, Stocchetti, N, and Brambilla, P
- Subjects
digital support ,digital mental health ,telehealth ,clinical outcome ,COVID-19 ,telepsychiatry ,telemedicine ,General Medicine ,health intervention ,psychiatric health ,mental health - Abstract
Background The COVID-19 pandemic is negatively impacting the mental health of both patients with COVID-19 and the general population. As current guidelines are limiting in-person contacts to reduce the spread of the virus, the development of a digital approach to implement in psychiatric and psychological consultations is needed. In this paper, we present the DigiCOVID protocol, a digital approach to offer remote, personalized psychological and psychiatric support to former or current patients with COVID-19 and their relatives. Objective The main goal of this project is to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and usability of the DigiCOVID protocol. Furthermore, we also aim to assess the impact of the abovementioned protocol by means of pre-post changes in psychological clinical variables. Methods Participants undergo an initial telephonic screening to ensure inclusion criteria are met. Secondly, participants complete a video-assisted neuropsychological IQ test as well as web-based self-reports of health and general well-being. Participants are then assigned to a psychotherapist who offers 8 teletherapy sessions. At the end of the therapy cycle, the web-based questionnaires are administered for a posttreatment evaluation. Results As of April 2022, we enrolled a total of 122 participants, of which 94 have completed neuropsychological tests and web-based questionnaires. Conclusions Our study aims at testing the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of DigiCOVID, a remote telemedicine protocol for the improvement of psychological and psychiatric health in patients with COVID-19 and their relatives. To date, the approach used seems to be feasible and highly customizable to patients’ needs, and therefore, the DigiCOVID protocol might pave the way for future telepsychiatry-based interventions. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05231018; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05231018?term=NCT05231018 &draw=2&rank=1 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID) DERR1-10.2196/39080
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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5. Feasibility and preliminary efficacy of brief tele-psychotherapy for COVID-19 patients and their first-degree relatives.
- Author
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Biagianti B, Lisi I, Di Liberto A, Turtulici N, Foti G, Zito S, Ginex V, Fornoni C, Gallo F, Cantù F, Tombola V, Di Fede V, Rossetti MG, Colombo E, Stocchetti N, Zanier ER, Bellani M, Bressi C, and Brambilla P
- Subjects
- Humans, SARS-CoV-2, Psychotherapy, Feasibility Studies, Communicable Disease Control, COVID-19, Telemedicine
- Abstract
Background: The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic compromised the mental health of COVID-19 patients and their family members. Due to social distancing and lockdown measures, a remote, tele-psychotherapy program for former or current COVID-19 patients and their relatives was implemented., Objective: The primary goal of this project was to evaluate intervention feasibility. The secondary aim was to assess the impact of the intervention by means of pre-post psychological changes., Methods: After a phone-based eligibility screening and remote neuropsychological testing, participants completed online self-reports assessing baseline COVID-related psychopathology. Next, participants attended eight tele-psychotherapy sessions. After treatment, the online self-reports were completed again., Results: Of 104 enrolled participants, 88 completed the intervention (84.6 % completion rate). Significant pre-post improvements were observed for generalized anxiety (d = 0.38), depression (d = 0.37), insomnia (d = 0.43), post-traumatic psychopathology (d = 0.54), and general malaise (d = 0.31). Baseline cluster analysis revealed a subgroup of 41 subjects (47.6 %) with no psychopathology, and a second subgroup of 45 subject (52.3 %) with moderate severity. Thirty-three percent of the second group reached full symptom remission, while 66 % remained symptomatic after treatment., Conclusions: Remote brief tele-psychotherapy for COVID-19 patients and their first-degree relatives is feasible and preliminary efficacious at reducing COVID-related psychopathology in a subgroup of patients. Further research is needed to investigate distinct profiles of treatment response., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest All authors report no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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6. One Year Facing COVID. Systematic Evaluation of Risk Factors Associated With Mental Distress Among Hospital Workers in Italy.
- Author
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Bonzini M, Comotti A, Fattori A, Cantù F, Colombo E, Tombola V, Myslymi E, Gatti M, Stucchi G, Nava C, Bordini L, Riboldi L, and Brambilla P
- Abstract
Introduction: Italy was the first Western country affected by the COVID-19 pandemic that still constitutes a severe challenge for healthcare workers (HCWs), with a deep impact on their mental health. Several studies confirmed that a considerable proportion of HCW developed adverse psychological impairment (PsI). To focus on preventive and rehabilitation measures, it is fundamental to identify individual and occupational risk factors. We systematically assessed possible PsI among all employees in a large university hospital in Italy, using validated psychometric scales in the context of occupational health surveillance., Methods: In the period of July 2020 to July 2021, we enrolled 990 HCWs. For each subject, the psychological wellbeing was screened in two steps. The first-level questionnaire collected gender, age, occupational role, personal and occupational COVID-19 exposure, general psychological discomfort (GHQ-12), post-traumatic stress symptoms (IES-R), and anxiety (GAD-7). Workers showing PsI (i.e., test scores above the cutoff in at least one among GHQ-12, IES-R, and GAD-7) have been further investigated by the second-level questionnaire (psycho-diagnostic) composed by PHQ-9, DES-II, and SCL-90 scales. If the second-level showed clinically relevant symptoms, then we offered individual specialist treatment (third level)., Results: Three hundred sixteen workers (32%) presented signs of PsI at the first-level screening questionnaire. Women, nurses, and subjects engaged in the COVID-19 area and with an infected family member showed significantly higher PsI risk. PsI prevalence was strongly associated with the pandemic trend in the region but sensibly decreased after January 2021, when almost all workers received the vaccination. A proportion of subjects with PsI presented clinically relevant symptoms (second-level screening) on PHQ-9 (35%), DES (20%), and SCL-90 (28%). These symptoms were associated neither to direct working experience with patients with COVID-19 nor to COVID-19 experience in the family and seemed not to be influenced by the pandemic waves or workers vaccination., Conclusions: The evaluation of psychological wellbeing of all hospital workers, directly or indirectly exposed to pandemic consequences, constitutes a unique condition to detect individual, occupational, and non-occupational risk factors for PsI in situations of high stress and/or disasters, as well as variables associated with symptom chronicization., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Bonzini, Comotti, Fattori, Cantù, Colombo, Tombola, Myslymi, Gatti, Stucchi, Nava, Bordini, Riboldi and Brambilla.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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