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1.
Dreaming ; : 14, 2022.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-1799599

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic has indiscriminately involved the whole world, producing a collective trauma that may have activated socially shared mental processes. It was hypothesized that the content of dreams could reflect a change in the way people are conceptualizing relationships, their environment, and the world in general after the emergency and the lockdown. We used data from "Dream Drawer," a free online forum where people could read about others' dreams or write about their own. Our sample consisted of 68 participants and 90 dreams. Most of them were students, and 85% of the participants were facing lockdown at home with families. To identify how dream content could reflect the impact of lockdowns, dreams were analyzed with the emotional text mining methodology. The analysis created a factorial space of 2 factors: "Relationship With the Outside" (between the containing and the losing) and "Relationship With the Inside" (between the processing and losing yourself). Each factor presents a symbolic and reflective dimension. In this space, there are 3 clusters ("holding," "refind the other," and "anguish defense"). The findings demonstrate that home isolation, which is portrayed in dreams as an extraordinary and novel event, appears to be the aspect of the pandemic that the unconscious has most exploited, detecting the activation of collective mental processes in dreams. Dreamwork could be the first step in beginning to process this collective catastrophic experience. The results of this research may be useful in determining collective changes in anxiety and distress.

2.
HemaSphere ; 5(SUPPL 2):631-632, 2021.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-1393415

ABSTRACT

Background: Data on SARS-CoV-2 infection in Hemoglobinopathies are still scarce and controversial. Since March 2020, we, as Italian Society for Thalassemia and Hemoglobinopathies (SITE), recommended close monitoring and set up an Italian survey to verify the impact of SARSCoV- 2 infection on patients with Hemoglobinopathies (EMO AER COVID-19 NCT04746066) among Italian Centers. Aims: To explore the hypothesis of an increased vulnerability of Hemoglobinopathies to SARS-COV2 infection. Methods: After SITE proposal and Ethics Committee approval, each participating Center entered data on a specific electronic Case Report Form (eCRF) (https://covid19.site-italia.org). Inclusion criteria included positive swab or serology and at least 15 days of follow-up from either the onset of symptoms or SARS-CoV2 positivity. This cut-off is updated to February 15, 2021. Results: Twenty-seven Centers that provide care to 6121 patients with Hemoglobinopathy (65% of the Italian population) recorded a total of 275 SARS-CoV2 infections (overall, prevalence 4.5%), in 191 transfusion- dependent thalassemia cases (TDT, prevalence 5.8%), 36 non-transfusion- dependent thalassemia (NTDT, prevalence 2.3%) and 48 sickle cell disease patients (SCD, prevalence 3.7%). Median age was 41 years (IQR: 30-48, range: 9 months-85 year). Twenty-eight patients (10 %) were pediatrics (median age: 6.5 years, IQR: 4-11). Most patients (72%) had comorbidities;134 (49%) had splenectomy or functional asplenia. We observed a broad spectrum of disease severity, ranging from no symptoms in 65 patients (24%) to multisystem organ failure and death in 5 patients: 2 TDT (age: 49 and 56 years), 1 NTDT (age: 45 years), 2 SCD (age: 57 years both). Overall, 56 (20%) patients required hospitalization, 12 in high-intensity care unit;10 required support by oxygen, 11 needed more intensive ventilation support with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), and 7 required intubation. Nine patients required ad hoc transfusion or more than scheduled. Two SCD patients of 9 and 20 months of age, respectively, recovered after a long and life-treating disease. One TDT patient experienced reinfection after 3 months from the first;one 30w-pregnant SCD woman developed COVID-19 without consequences for herself and the fetus. Overall clinical severity has been higher in SCD than in thalassemia patients. Summary/Conclusion: The prevalence of COVID-19 in Hemoglobinopathies apparently overlaps the general population (4.5% vs 4.6%), however, these patients are more strictly observed and we could postulate that the precautions suggested or self-applied by the patients were effective. The overall mortality is 1.8% vs 3.4% and the difference may be due to the younger age of patients with Hemoglobinopathies. Our data confirm the higher risk of severe disease and death in SCD.

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