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1.
Eur J Neurol ; 24(4): 631-637, 2017 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28220581

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Receiving clear, complete and up-to-date information and having a satisfying relationship with the health professional (HP) are of primary importance for MS patients. Healthcare organization plays a key role in promoting an effective relationship and communication between patients and HPs. The present study aims to explore which care organization and service characteristics provided by Italian MS centres best predict patients' satisfaction with healthcare. METHODS: Eighty-one centres and 707 patients (502 women, mean age 40.5 years, SD 10.2; mean education 12.2 years, SD 3.6; time since diagnosis 5.9 years, SD 1.5) were included in the analysis. The care organization and service provided by each centre were evaluated in comparison with the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines on management of MS. Patients' satisfaction with care was measured using the patient self-assessed questionnaire 'Comunicazione medico-paziente nella Sclerosi Multipla, revised' section 2 (COSM-R section 2). RESULTS: The clinical characteristics of patients significantly affected their satisfaction. A multivariate regression model showed that higher patients' satisfaction (COSM-R score) was inversely associated with hospital size (number of patients under care) (ß = -0.21, 95% confidence interval -0.35; -0.07) and directly associated with psychological interventions (ß = 2.44, 95% confidence interval 0.29; 4.59). CONCLUSIONS: Multiple sclerosis patients from larger hospitals are less satisfied with the information received and the relationship with HPs. Building an individualized relationship between patients and HPs and tailoring the communication of information improve patients' satisfaction. Such a goal is probably less likely to be accomplished in larger centres with many incoming patients. Moreover, when the centres also provide structured psychological interventions, the patients are more satisfied.


Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration , Multiple Sclerosis/therapy , Patient Satisfaction , Physician-Patient Relations , Adult , Female , Humans , Italy , Male , Middle Aged , Surveys and Questionnaires
2.
Mult Scler ; 20(9): 1224-33, 2014 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24436456

BACKGROUND: The Comunicazione medico-paziente nella Sclerosi Multipla - Revised (COSM-R) is a patient self-assessed questionnaire probing the moment of multiple sclerosis (MS) diagnosis disclosure (section 1, five items) and following period (section 2, 15 items). OBJECTIVES: This study examined COSM-R dimensionality and measurement properties through Rasch analysis (partial-credit model) and proposed a revised questionnaire. METHODS: Cross-sectional COSM-R data were obtained from 1068 people with MS (PwMS, 1065 questionnaires) participating in four studies (102 centres). Mean age was 40 years (range 17-73); 70% were women; 53% were from Northern, 25% from Central, and 21% from Southern Italy. RESULTS: Unidimensionality was not confirmed for COSM-R section 1, but was for section 2 after removal of three items. The revised instrument (COSM-S, Shortened) consisted of the original five-item checklist (section 1), modified by removing the table grouping of three items, and 12 of the original 15 section 2 items, which could now be summed and transformed into an interval scale. Scores were higher for items assessing emotional satisfaction than for those assessing informational satisfaction. CONCLUSIONS: The proposed COSM-S is a composite measure of satisfaction with MS diagnosis communication with improved metric properties over the original COSM-R, and whose section 2 satisfies Rasch model expectations.


Communication , Multiple Sclerosis/diagnosis , Patient Satisfaction , Physician-Patient Relations , Self Report , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Attitude of Health Personnel , Checklist , Cross-Sectional Studies , Emotions , Female , Humans , Italy , Male , Middle Aged , Multiple Sclerosis/psychology , Psychometrics , Young Adult
3.
Arch Ital Biol ; 150(2-3): 185-93, 2012.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23165878

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: This study investigated whether the altered organization of post-training sleep in patients with narcolepsy-cataplexy (NC) is associated with a lower off-line improvement in the consolidation of motor skills compared with normal subjects. STUDY DESIGN: Fourteen drug-naive NC patients, fulfilling the international clinical and polysomnographic diagnostic criteria, and 14 individually-matched controls underwent training at a sequential finger tapping task (FTT) and were re-tested on the next morning (after a night with polysomnographic recording) and after another six nights (spent at home). SETTING: Training and retrieval sessions were performed in a controlled laboratory setting. RESULTS: FTT performance was worse in NC patients than controls at training and at both retrieval sessions and showed a fairly different time course (slower than in controls) of consolidation. Several sleep indices (lower values of stage-2 NREM sleep and SWS) were compatible with a lower effectiveness of sleep for consolidation of motor skills in NC patients, although no statistically significant relationship was found between such indices and improvement rate. CONCLUSION: The consolidation process of motor skills results less effective in NC patients since training and slower than in normal subjects over the week following training. The wider variations in performance scores and sleep parameters of post.-training night in NC patients relative to controls suggest that a) the lower initial consolidation may be due to a less effective encoding consequent to altered prior sleep, and b) the consolidation process over the 24 h following training is negatively influenced not only by the altered characteristics of post-training sleep, but also by the daytime sleepiness following training.


Motor Skills/physiology , Narcolepsy/physiopathology , Sleep/physiology , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Case-Control Studies , Female , Fingers/physiopathology , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Polysomnography , Psychometrics , Regression Analysis
4.
Int J Clin Pract ; 66(5): 504-14, 2012 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22512609

BACKGROUND: In the light of the new diagnostic criteria for multiple sclerosis (MS) and currently available early treatment, this study aimed to explore whether, and to what extent, disclosure of the diagnosis of MS or clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) affects patients' anxiety, mood and quality of life (QoL). METHODS: Eligible participants were all patients referred for the first time to the Neurological Unit who had manifested symptoms suggestive of MS for no more than 6 months. All patients were evaluated for (i) QoL (SEIQoL and MS-QoL54), (ii) Anxiety (STAI) and Depression (CMDI) on study inclusion (T0), 30 days after diagnosis disclosure (T30), and after 1 (T1y) and 2 (T2y) years' follow-up. RESULTS: Two hundred and twenty-nine patients were enrolled; 93 of these were unaware of their diagnosis. Patients who already knew their diagnosis (100 with CIS and 22 with MS) were excluded from the main analyses and used to perform control analyses. At the end of the screening, an MS diagnosis was disclosed to 18 of the 93 patients, whereas a CIS diagnosis was disclosed to 62 patients (12 patients received a diagnosis other than MS or CIS). Thirty days after diagnosis disclosure, irrespective of the diagnosis disclosed, both QoL and Anxiety and Depression were significantly rated as better compared to the start of screening, (p(s) < 0.03), and this improvement remained stable over the two annual follow-ups. However, as suggested by a significant 'Time' × 'Diagnosis' interaction with regard to both QoL and Anxiety and Depression (p(s) < 0.02), the effect of the disclosure in the short term differed depending on CIS or MS diagnosis. Specifically, on MSQoL, which is a health-related QoL scale, we found a statically significant improvement, immediately after the diagnosis disclosure, in both the MS and CIS groups (p(s) < 0.01). Differently, on SEIQoL, which is a non health-related QoL measure, and on the anxiety scale, we observed a statistically significant improvement only in the group which received a MS diagnosis (p(s) < 0.03). CONCLUSIONS: This first prospective study provides objective data showing that early disclosure of MS diagnosis improves both the patient's QoL and psychological well-being. In addition, the results seem to suggest that CIS disclosure does not lead to the same favourable effects.


Anxiety Disorders/etiology , Depressive Disorder/etiology , Multiple Sclerosis/psychology , Quality of Life , Adolescent , Adult , Disclosure , Female , Humans , Male , Prospective Studies , Surveys and Questionnaires , Time Factors , Young Adult
5.
Mult Scler ; 16(10): 1237-47, 2010 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20813775

BACKGROUND: We describe the development and clinical validation of a patient self-administered tool assessing the quality of multiple sclerosis diagnosis disclosure. METHOD: A multiple sclerosis expert panel generated questionnaire items from the Doctor's Interpersonal Skills Questionnaire, literature review, and interviews with neurology inpatients. The resulting 19-item Comunicazione medico-paziente nella Sclerosi Multipla (COSM) was pilot tested/debriefed on seven patients with multiple sclerosis and administered to 80 patients newly diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. The resulting revised 20-item version (COSM-R) was debriefed on five patients with multiple sclerosis, field tested/debriefed on multiple sclerosis patients, and field tested on 105 patients newly diagnosed with multiple sclerosis participating in a clinical trial on an information aid. The hypothesized monofactorial structure of COSM-R section 2 was tested on the latter two groups. RESULTS: The questionnaire was well accepted. Scaling assumptions were satisfactory in terms of score distributions, item-total correlations and internal consistency. Factor analysis confirmed section 2's monofactorial structure, which was also test-retest reliable (intraclass correlation coefficient [ICC] 0.73; 95% CI 0.54-0.85). Section 1 had only fair test-retest reliability (ICC 0.45; 95% CI 0.12-0.69), and three items had 8-21% missed responses. CONCLUSIONS: COSM-R is a brief, easy-to-interpret MS-specific questionnaire for use as a health care indicator.


Multiple Sclerosis/psychology , Patient Satisfaction , Surveys and Questionnaires , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Cognition/physiology , Communication , Disease Progression , Early Diagnosis , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Physician-Patient Relations , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Reproducibility of Results , Young Adult
6.
Eur J Neurol ; 9(4): 401-5, 2002 Jul.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12099925

Twelve consecutive patients having previously experienced one or more episodes of isolated transient topographical amnesia (TTA) underwent neuropsychological examination 6-12 months after the last episode to detect signs of global cognitive decline and to assess, in particular, cognitive functions deemed critical for topographical orientation. The test scores were compared with those of 12 normal subjects matched for age, sex, educational level and place of residence. Both patients and controls showed normal performances in all tasks. The comparison between the two groups revealed a significantly lower performance of the patient group in a task of geographical orientation, namely 'Map of Italy'. We conclude that isolated episodes of TTA in the elderly per se do not represent a sign of mental deterioration, but can be associated with frailty on survey components of spatial orientation. It remains to be explained whether this feature is a pre-existing condition favouring the occurrence of the episodes of topographical amnesia or represents a sequela.


Amnesia, Transient Global/physiopathology , Cognition , Activities of Daily Living , Aged , Amnesia, Transient Global/complications , Amnesia, Transient Global/rehabilitation , Confusion/etiology , Dementia/etiology , Disease Progression , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Recovery of Function
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