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1.
Transl Med UniSa ; 19: 42-48, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31360666

ABSTRACT

We developed and tested an innovative physical training method in older adults that embeds the gym program into everyday life in the most conservative way possible. Physical training was included in the activities of local parishes where older women from Southern Italy spend most of their free time and was delivered by trained physical therapists with the support of an ICT tool known as CoCo. 113 older women (aged 72.0 [69.0-75.0] years) noncompliant to conventional exercise programs participated to the study. 57 of them underwent the final anthropometric assessment and 50 the final physical tests. In study completers handgrip strength and physical performance evaluated with the chair-stand, the two minutes step and the chair-sit and -reach tests significantly improved. Quality of life as evaluated with the EuroQol-5dimension (EQ-5D) questionnaire improved as well. In conclusion, a training program designed to minimally impact on life habits of older people is effective in improving fitness in patients noncompliant to other to physical exercise programs.

2.
Transl Med UniSa ; 16: 24-29, 2017 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28775966

ABSTRACT

Although there is evidence of a growing awareness of the problem, no official policy statements or regulatory guidelines on polypharmacy have been released up to date by Italian Health Authorities. Medication review, application of appropriateness criteria and computerized prescription support systems are all possible approaches in order to improve the quality of prescribing in older persons. More focused training courses on multimorbidity and polytherapy management are encouraged. Furthermore a multidisciplinary approach integrating different health care professionals (physicians, pharmacists, and nurses) may positively impact on reducing the sense of fear related to discontinue or substitute drugs prescribed by others; the fragmentation of therapy among different specialists; reducing costs; and improving adverse drug reaction detection and reporting. Aiming at achieving the individualized pharmacotherapy, a multidisciplinary approach starting with identification of patients and risk for drug-related problems, followed by medication review overtime and use of inappropriateness criteria, supported by computerized systems has been proposed.

3.
Ann Ig ; 20(1): 9-15, 2008.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18478672

ABSTRACT

Cost utility analysis (CUA) is a peculiar kind of efficacy evaluation. The outcome is the quality adjusted years of life derived by comparing an intervention versus a comparator. We review literature analyzing some criticism emerging from Cost Utility evaluation as selection bias or eventual methodological inconsistency. We applied this model to a new drug--Macugen--assessing an incremental cost of 7258.68 euro for a two years treatment schedule. Our analysis suggest that CUA is potential informative especially in certain context as prevention, but efficacy assessment and robust outcomes measuring is crucial.


Subject(s)
Drug Evaluation/economics , Cost-Benefit Analysis/methods , Humans
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