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1.
J Clin Med ; 13(16)2024 Aug 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39200856

ABSTRACT

Background: Bipolar disorder (BD) is a severe psychiatric illness characterized by a chronic course and recurrent episodes, including residual depressive symptoms even during euthymic phases. These symptoms, although not meeting criteria for a depressive episode, are linked to relapse risk and impaired social functioning. This study aims to assess whether Virtual Reality Cognitive Remediation Training reduces depressive symptoms below the clinical threshold in individuals with BD. Methods: This post hoc analysis focuses on the secondary outcome (PHQ9) of a randomized-controlled trial. Participants were recruited from the Center of Liaison Psychiatry and Psychosomatics in Italy. The experimental group received Virtual Reality Cognitive Remediation, while the control group received standard treatment Results: Data from 39 individuals in the experimental group and 25 in the control group were analyzed. A greater reduction in PHQ-9 scores (>9) was observed in the experimental group (71.8% to 48.7%) compared to the control group. Significant improvements in total PHQ-9 scores and specific symptoms were noted in the experimental group compared to the control group. Conclusions: The study highlights the significant impact of virtual reality intervention on reducing depressive symptoms in bipolar disorder. This promising outcome underscores the potential preventive role of cognitive stimulation in relapse prevention. The intervention could offer valuable benefits for both treatment and prevention strategies in bipolar disorder.

2.
J Clin Med ; 13(13)2024 Jun 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38999351

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Rehabilitative interventions employing technology play a crucial role in bipolar disorder (BD) treatment. The study aims to appraise the virtual reality (VR)-based cognitive remediation (CR) and the interpersonal rhythm approaches to treatment outcomes of BD across different age groups. Methods: Post-hoc analysis of a 12-week randomizedcontrolled cross-over feasibility trial involving people with mood disorders (BD, DSM-IV) aged 18-75 years old: thirty-nine exposed to the experimental VR-based CR vs 25 waiting list controls. People with BD relapse, epilepsy or severe eye diseases (due to the potential VR risks exposure) were excluded. Biological Rhythms Interview of Assessment in Neuropsychiatry (BRIAN) was used to measure the outcome. Results: Cases and controls did not statistically significantly differ in age and sex distributions. Personal rhythm scores improved over the study follow-up in the experimental vs the control group (APC = 8.7%; F = 111.9; p < 0.0001), both in young (18-45 years) (APC = 5.5%; F = 70.46; p < 0.0001) and, to a lesser extent, older (>46 years) adults (APC = 10.5%; F = 12.110; p = 0.002). Conclusions: This study observed improved synchronization of personal and social rhythms in individuals with BD after a virtual reality cognitive remediation intervention, particularly in social activity, daily activities, and chronotype, with greater benefits in the younger population.

3.
BMJ Open ; 14(3): e079345, 2024 Mar 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38553055

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Uncomplicated urinary tract infections (uUTIs) in women are common infections encountered in primary care. Evidence suggests that rapid point-of-care tests (POCTs) to detect bacteria and erythrocytes in urine at presentation may help primary care clinicians to identify women with uUTIs in whom antibiotics can be withheld without influencing clinical outcomes. This pilot study aims to provide preliminary evidence on whether a POCT informed management of uUTI in women can safely reduce antibiotic use. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This is an open-label two-arm parallel cluster-randomised controlled pilot trial. 20 general practices affiliated with the Bavarian Practice-Based Research Network (BayFoNet) in Germany were randomly assigned to deliver patient management based on POCTs or to provide usual care. POCTs consist of phase-contrast microscopy to detect bacteria and urinary dipsticks to detect erythrocytes in urine samples. In both arms, urine samples will be obtained at presentation for POCTs (intervention arm only) and microbiological analysis. Women will be followed-up for 28 days from enrolment using self-reported symptom diaries, telephone follow-up and a review of the electronic medical record. Primary outcomes are feasibility of patient enrolment and retention rates per site, which will be summarised by means and SDs, with corresponding confidence and prediction intervals. Secondary outcomes include antibiotic use for UTI at day 28, time to symptom resolution, symptom burden, number of recurrent and upper UTIs and re-consultations and diagnostic accuracy of POCTs versus urine culture as the reference standard. These outcomes will be explored at cluster-levels and individual-levels using descriptive statistics, two-sample hypothesis tests and mixed effects models or generalised estimation equations. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The University of Würzburg institutional review board approved MicUTI on 16 December 2022 (protocol n. 109/22-sc). Study findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications, conferences, reports addressed to clinicians and the local citizen's forums. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05667207.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents , Urinary Tract Infections , Female , Humans , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Microscopy , Pilot Projects , Point-of-Care Systems , Primary Health Care , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic , Urinary Tract Infections/diagnosis , Urinary Tract Infections/drug therapy , Urinary Tract Infections/microbiology , Multicenter Studies as Topic
4.
BJGP Open ; 2024 Jul 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38423622

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: To be effective, interventions aimed at increasing the appropriateness of antibiotic use in primary care should consider the perspectives of prescribing physicians. AIM: To explore the decision making of general practitioners (GPs) when managing uncomplicated urinary tract infections (uUTIs) in women. DESIGN & SETTING: A qualitative study using semi-structured interviews with 22 GPs in Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg (southern Germany). METHOD: Verbatim transcripts were analysed through inductive qualitative content analysis. RESULTS: We generated the following three main themes: factors facilitating the decision making; factors complicating the decision making; and consultation modalities. According to participants, following evidence-based recommendations makes the prescription decision smoother. GPs' and patients' prior experiences and beliefs guides decisions towards certain antibiotics, even if those experiences and beliefs contradict evidence-based recommendations. Patient expectations and demands also condition antibiotic prescribing, favouring it. Organisational constraints, such as time pressure, the day of the week (for example, before weekends), and a lower cost of antibiotics for patients than alternative treatments favour the decision to prescribe antibiotics. Diagnostic and prognostic uncertainty complicates decision making, as does scepticism towards evidence-based recommendations. Discordance within the patient-doctor relationship contributed to this complexity. Regarding consultation modalities, a more in-depth consultation and shared decision making were seen as helpful in this process. CONCLUSION: We identified different factors as intervening against or for a straightforward management decision when dealing with women with uUTIs. They reveal the complexity behind the GPs' decision making. Providing GPs with easy-to-apply guidance while removing economic constraints to allocate sufficient consultation time, and supporting shared decision making may help GPs appropriately manage uUTIs in women.

5.
J Gen Intern Med ; 39(7): 1214-1226, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38360961

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The objective of this network meta-analysis was to compare rates of clinical response and mortality for empiric oral antibiotic regimens in adults with mild-moderate community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). METHODS: We searched PubMed, Cochrane, and the reference lists of systematic reviews and clinical guidelines. We included randomized trials of adults with radiologically confirmed mild to moderate CAP initially treated orally and reporting clinical cure or mortality. Abstracts and studies were reviewed in parallel for inclusion in the analysis and for data abstraction. We performed separate analyses by antibiotic medications and antibiotic classes and present the results through network diagrams and forest plots sorted by p-scores. We assessed the quality of each study using the Cochrane Risk of Bias framework, as well as global and local inconsistency. RESULTS: We identified 24 studies with 9361 patients: six at low risk of bias, six at unclear risk, and 12 at high risk. Nemonoxacin, levofloxacin, and telithromycin were most likely to achieve clinical response (p-score 0.79, 0.71, and 0.69 respectively), while penicillin and amoxicillin were least likely to achieve clinical response. Levofloxacin, nemonoxacin, azithromycin, and amoxicillin-clavulanate were most likely to be associated with lower mortality (p-score 0.85, 0.75, 0.74, and 0.68 respectively). By antibiotic class, quinolones and macrolides were most effective for clinical response (0.71 and 0.70 respectively), with amoxicillin-clavulanate plus macrolides and beta-lactams being less effective (p-score 0.11 and 0.22). Quinolones were most likely to be associated with lower mortality (0.63). All confidence intervals were broad and partially overlapping. CONCLUSION: We observed trends toward a better clinical response and lower mortality for quinolones as empiric antibiotics for CAP, but found no conclusive evidence of any antibiotic being clearly more effective than another. More trials are needed to inform guideline recommendations on the most effective antibiotic regimens for outpatients with mild to moderate CAP.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents , Community-Acquired Infections , Network Meta-Analysis , Humans , Community-Acquired Infections/drug therapy , Community-Acquired Infections/mortality , Anti-Bacterial Agents/administration & dosage , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Administration, Oral , Adult , Pneumonia, Bacterial/drug therapy , Pneumonia, Bacterial/mortality , Pneumonia/drug therapy , Pneumonia/mortality , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic/methods
6.
Am Fam Physician ; 109(2): 167-174, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38393801

ABSTRACT

An acute uncomplicated urinary tract infection (UTI) is a bacterial infection of the lower urinary tract with no sign of systemic illness or pyelonephritis in a noncatheterized, nonpregnant adult with no urologic abnormalities or immunocompromise. In women, a self-diagnosis of a UTI with the presence of typical symptoms (e.g., frequency, urgency, dysuria/burning sensation, nocturia, suprapubic pain), without vaginal discharge, is accurate enough to diagnose an uncomplicated UTI without further testing. Urine culture and susceptibility testing should be reserved for women with recurrent infection, treatment failure, history of resistant isolates, or atypical presentation to make a definitive diagnosis and guide antibiotic selection. First-line antibiotics include nitrofurantoin for five days, fosfomycin in a single dose, trimethoprim for three days, or trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole for three days. Symptomatic treatment with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and delayed antibiotics may be considered because the risk of complications is low. Increased fluids, intake of cranberry products, and methenamine hippurate can prevent recurrent infections. Antibiotic prophylaxis is also effective in preventing recurrence but has a risk of adverse effects and antimicrobial resistance. Men with lower UTI symptoms should always receive antibiotics, with urine culture and susceptibility results guiding the antibiotic choice. Clinicians should also consider the possibility of urethritis and prostatitis in men with UTI symptoms. First-line antibiotics for men with uncomplicated UTI include trimethoprim, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole, and nitrofurantoin for seven days. Uncomplicated UTIs in nonfrail women and men 65 years and older with no relevant comorbidities also necessitate a urine culture with susceptibility testing to adjust the antibiotic choice after initial empiric treatment; first-line antibiotics and treatment durations do not differ from those recommended for younger adults.


Subject(s)
Fosfomycin , Urinary Tract Infections , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Fosfomycin/therapeutic use , Nitrofurantoin/therapeutic use , Trimethoprim, Sulfamethoxazole Drug Combination/therapeutic use , Urinary Tract Infections/diagnosis , Urinary Tract Infections/drug therapy
7.
Recenti Prog Med ; 114(12): 712-729, 2023 Dec.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38031853

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The recent pandemic has brought into sharper focus the need, long emphasised in the scientific literature, for a change in primary care that goes beyond the limits of the hyper-specialisation constitutive of Western health systems. While the direction of the cultural and organisational change that needs to be developed is well outlined, little is written about the competencies and values that physicians must acquire in order to shape a new and coherent organisation of services. The patient encounter is the frame in which these competencies take shape, and it is from this perspective that these competencies are examined here. OBJECTIVES: The aim of this narrative review of empirical studies and the multisciplinary literature is to provide primary care physicians with some tips for a good management of the medical consultation. These tips outline the competencies needed in general practice, rethought within the paradigm of complexity of care. RESULTS: The concepts, practices and values on which the 12 tips are based are: a) an attitude of attention to the complexity of care in which the patient's subjectivity can only be understood through an encounter with one's own subjectivity; b) the peculiar method of clinical reasoning in general practice, which includes the early generation of diagnostic hypotheses to be verified using simple and inexpensive tests, such as history taking and physical examination; these tests should have a high negative predictive value to rule out more serious conditions; c) the contextualisation of the working diagnosis (opposed to a definitive diagnosis) as a tool for dealing with complexity; d) the analysis of the evolution of scenarios as a tool for planning and choosing courses of action; e) the assessment of uncertainty in addition to that of measurable risk; f) the involvement of the patient and the use of the test of time as tools for managing uncertainty; g) the centrality of sharing the decision with the patient.


Subject(s)
Primary Health Care , Referral and Consultation , Humans
8.
Recenti Prog Med ; 114(12): 744-748, 2023 Dec.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38031857

ABSTRACT

This monthly article provides a collection of summaries of the most relevant studies identified as POEMs (patient-oriented evidence that matters) for Italian primary care physicians. 1) Based on efficacy, safety, and cost, a regimen of terbinafine 250 mg once daily for 12 weeks, followed by a 12-week period of no therapy, and then a 4-week booster of terbinafine 250 mg is preferred for onychomycosis in adults for the outcome of complete cure at 1 year. 2) A high-quality randomized trial found that standard-course antibiotic therapy for children with uncomplicated urinary tract infection was superior to short-course therapy. However, the number needed to treat of 28 suggests that offering short-course therapy is not unreasonable, especially if there is good follow-up in the subsequent weeks. 3) An updated guideline of the American College of Physicians on screening of colorectal cancer adds 2 new recommendations. One is to consider not screening patients aged 45 to 49 years. The other recommendation is against screening using stool Dna, computed tomography colonography, capsule endoscopy, urine, or serum screening tests for colorectal cancer. 4) The US Preventive Services Task Force found additional evidence on the benefit of folic acid supplementation for preventing neural tube defects. Since the critical period starts at least 1 month before conception, the task force recommends a daily supplement of 0.4 mg to 0.8 mg folic acid for all women who plan to or could become pregnant.


Subject(s)
Colorectal Neoplasms , Neural Tube Defects , Physicians, Primary Care , Pregnancy , Adult , Child , Humans , Female , Terbinafine , Folic Acid , Neural Tube Defects/prevention & control
9.
Recenti Prog Med ; 114(11): 639-641, 2023 11.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37902536

ABSTRACT

One of the challenges of medical practice, especially primary care because of its breadth, is keeping up with the latest research findings. As physicians, how can we select, among hundreds of thousands of research studies published each year, those worth knowing about? Since 1996, a group of American primary care physicians have been systematically reviewing over 100 journals every month to identify new Patient-Oriented Evidence that Matters (POEMs). To be a POEM, a research study must have the potential to change clinical practice by addressing hard, patient-oriented outcomes, such as mortality, intensity or duration of symptoms, or quality of life, as opposed to disease-oriented (surrogate) outcomes, such as laboratory parameters. In addition, it must be methodologically valid, i.e., reasonably free of bias, with its validity evaluated through objective criteria by experts in evidence-based medicine with no conflicts of interest with the industry. To be useful at the point of care, these studies must be easy to retrieve and require little work to review. Starting from this issue, a selection of POEMs most likely to change and improve Italian primary care practice will be published monthly in Recenti Progressi in Medicina as brief evidence summaries. In addition, yearly, we will present an article summarizing the 20 most important research studies for primary care of the previous year.


Subject(s)
Physicians , Quality of Life , Humans , Evidence-Based Medicine , Laboratories , Patients
10.
Recenti Prog Med ; 114(11): 654-664, 2023 11.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37902539

ABSTRACT

In this article, we examine three out of the seven distinctive values of General practice/family medicine (Gpfm), as proposed by World Organization of Family Doctors (Wonca) and recently translated into Italian: patient-centered care, continuity of care, and evidence-based care. We believe that these values can contribute to the ongoing debate on the reorganization of the primary care model and the reform of the core curriculum of Italian Gpfm. These three values are the basis of the distinctive methodological and relational competencies of Gpfm. In this contribution, we analyze them through the lens of epistemology of complexity, aiming to highlight the unique aspects of this method and relationship, thus identifying the necessary competencies for Gpfm. The thought and method of care - the first and third values - are analyzed considering that the framework in which Gpfm operates leads to significant modifications of the clinical method. While it certainly encompasses elements of the traditional clinical method, they are executed at different paces and with different objectives, employing distinct strategies. For instance, the epidemiological context with a high prevalence of symptomatic distress but low prevalence of "true" disease needs the early generation of diagnostic hypotheses. These hypotheses are then tested using verbal and physical examinations as exclusion tests with high predictive power. The aim is to arrive at diagnoses that are not exhaustive, yet operational and contextualized. Furthermore, the uncertainty inherent in Gpfm requires the utilization of contextual knowledge related to the patient's environment, negotiation with the patient about the tolerable threshold of decisional uncertainty, their involvement - which increases with greater uncertainty - and the use of the test of time within an organizational and relational protective network. Complex thinking enables reflection on the second value - the relationship - by assigning the physician's subjectivity a place as precious as that of the patient, which is already historically established. Thus, both the physician and patient, as subjects, exist on the same ontological plane but differ methodologically due to their distinct roles. Adopting an epistemology of complexity in Gpfm allows each variable of the system - subjects, context, method, clinical aspects - to regain significance. This approach favours a genuine science in service of humanity.


Subject(s)
General Practice , Physicians , Humans , Family Practice , Patient-Centered Care
11.
Recenti Prog Med ; 114(11): 675-679, 2023 11.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37902542

ABSTRACT

This monthly article provides a selection of summaries of the most relevant studies identified as POEMs (patient-oriented evidence that matters) for Italian primary care physicians. Amoxicillin is no more likely to cause a rash than any other antibiotic in children with infectious mononucleosis. According to a good quality systematic review and network meta-analysis, only a small number of randomized controlled trials, disappointing in overall quality, suggest that for managing neuropsychiatric symptoms in adults with dementia, risperidone has the best balance of effectiveness and adverse effects. In a rigorously conducted double-blind randomized controlled trial, adults with acute low back or neck pain treated with opioids had no benefit in pain relief as those treated with placebo. In a large study of more than 21,000 participants aged 60 to 84 years, taking 60,000 IU vitamin D each month slightly reduced their likelihood of experiencing a major cardiovascular event (number needed to treat = 172 over 5 years). A single screening colonoscopy had higher rates of participation than 5 years of fecal occult blood testing in a high-quality study in which patients were offered free screening with these two methods (84% vs 73%; p<0.001).


Subject(s)
Physicians, Primary Care , Adult , Child , Humans , Amoxicillin , Analgesics, Opioid , Anti-Bacterial Agents , Colonoscopy
12.
Recenti Prog Med ; 111(6): 368-370, 2020 06.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32573552

ABSTRACT

Inappropriate prescriptions and consumption of antibiotics are the main determinants of the selection of antibiotic resistant bacteria. Italy has a high consumption rate of antibiotics if compared to other European countries and 90% of these drugs are prescribed in an outpatient setting by General Practitioners (GPs). Therefore, as stated by the Italian Medicines Agency (AIFA): «General Practice is [...] a crucial clinical area in which the utilization of these kind of drugs have to be monitored, [...] considering that a relevant quote of prescriptions could be avoided. Achieving a better understanding of the clinical and extra-clinical determinants of GPs prescription habits is, therefore, hugely important to design appropriate interventions to tackle the phenomenon of inappropriate antibiotic use. To the best of our knowledge, there are no published studies measuring GPs knowledge and attitudes on antibiotic resistance and prescriptions in our setting. To fill this lack of knowledge, the aim of our study is the development of a valid and reliable questionnaire in Italian language, able to measure these constructs. In this article, we present the process of cross-cultural adaptation of the KAAR-11 questionnaire from Spanish into Italian language and its preliminary validation.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents , General Practitioners , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Attitude , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Humans , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Surveys and Questionnaires
13.
Braz. J. Psychiatry (São Paulo, 1999, Impr.) ; 39(2): 147-153, Apr.-June 2017. tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-844187

ABSTRACT

Objective: To ascertain lifetime prevalence of positivity to a screening questionnaire for bipolar disorders (BD) in Sardinian immigrants to Argentina and residents of Sardinia and assess whether such positivity affects quality of life (QoL) in either group. Our hypothesis is that screen positivity for BD may be more frequent in immigrants. Methods: Observational study. Subjects were randomly selected from the membership lists of associations of Sardinian immigrants in Argentina. A study carried out in Sardinia using the same methodology was used for comparison. The Mood Disorder Questionnaire was used to screen for mania/hypomania and the Short-Form Health Survey-12 to measure QoL. Results: A higher prevalence of manic/hypomanic episodes was found in Sardinian immigrants to Argentina (p < 0.0001; odds ratio = 3.0, 95% confidence interval 1.87-4.77). Positivity at screening was associated with a lower QoL both in Sardinian immigrants to Argentina and in residents of Sardinia. Conclusions: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to show a higher lifetime prevalence of manic/hypomanic episodes in a general-population sample of individuals who migrated to a foreign country. Our results are in agreement with the hypothesis that hyperactive/novelty-seeking features may represent an adaptive substrate in certain conditions of social change.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Adult , Bipolar Disorder/epidemiology , Emigrants and Immigrants/psychology , Argentina/epidemiology , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales/standards , Quality of Life/psychology , Logistic Models , Sex Factors , Prevalence , Cross-Sectional Studies , Surveys and Questionnaires/standards , Risk Factors , Age Factors , Sex Distribution , Age Distribution , Emigrants and Immigrants/statistics & numerical data , Italy/ethnology
14.
Braz J Psychiatry ; 39(2): 147-153, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28300934

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE:: To ascertain lifetime prevalence of positivity to a screening questionnaire for bipolar disorders (BD) in Sardinian immigrants to Argentina and residents of Sardinia and assess whether such positivity affects quality of life (QoL) in either group. Our hypothesis is that screen positivity for BD may be more frequent in immigrants. METHODS:: Observational study. Subjects were randomly selected from the membership lists of associations of Sardinian immigrants in Argentina. A study carried out in Sardinia using the same methodology was used for comparison. The Mood Disorder Questionnaire was used to screen for mania/hypomania and the Short-Form Health Survey-12 to measure QoL. RESULTS:: A higher prevalence of manic/hypomanic episodes was found in Sardinian immigrants to Argentina (p < 0.0001; odds ratio = 3.0, 95% confidence interval 1.87-4.77). Positivity at screening was associated with a lower QoL both in Sardinian immigrants to Argentina and in residents of Sardinia. CONCLUSIONS:: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to show a higher lifetime prevalence of manic/hypomanic episodes in a general-population sample of individuals who migrated to a foreign country. Our results are in agreement with the hypothesis that hyperactive/novelty-seeking features may represent an adaptive substrate in certain conditions of social change.


Subject(s)
Bipolar Disorder/epidemiology , Emigrants and Immigrants/psychology , Adult , Age Distribution , Age Factors , Argentina/epidemiology , Cross-Sectional Studies , Emigrants and Immigrants/statistics & numerical data , Female , Humans , Italy/ethnology , Logistic Models , Male , Prevalence , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales/standards , Quality of Life/psychology , Risk Factors , Sex Distribution , Sex Factors , Surveys and Questionnaires/standards
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