rome and Feeding-and-Eating-Disorders

rome has been researched along with Feeding-and-Eating-Disorders* in 3 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for rome and Feeding-and-Eating-Disorders

ArticleYear
Beyond screening in primary practice settings: Time to stop fiddling while Rome is burning.
    The International journal of eating disorders, 2022, Volume: 55, Issue:9

    This forum presents the current state of research in the screening and identification of people with eating disorders in community and primary care, taking a longer-term perspective that highlights the slow rate of progression in development of instruments, and impact on polices and practice.. An historical overview is presented, followed by a critique of contemporary instruments and practice, and barriers to case detection and appropriate referral pathways.. There are now many instruments but all lack high levels of positive predictive power. However, some do have high sensitivity. Barriers contributing to poor detection and the treatment gap include need for improved education and support for primary care professionals and lack of confidence of individuals with eating disorders to initiate a discussion with health professionals. The best screening instrument would not overcome either of these barriers.. We purport there is an urgent need to improve current screening instruments (not to develop more), particularly those with high sensitivity. These should be being employed alongside programs to both improve primary care professionals' skills in assessment and management of people with eating disorders, and to empower consumers to navigate care pathways.. We argue that further screening instruments for eating disorders are not needed. Rather, it is more urgent to have a greater research focus on how to encourage primary care workers to ask about eating and body image and how to best translate that to more individuals with eating disorders being offered treatment. This work needs to be linked with tools that empower consumers to navigate care pathways.

    Topics: Feeding and Eating Disorders; Health Personnel; Humans; Mass Screening; Rome

2022

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for rome and Feeding-and-Eating-Disorders

ArticleYear
Exploring the Relationship between Family Functioning and Psycho-Pathology in a Sample in the Pediatric Age.
    The Spanish journal of psychology, 2015, Mar-17, Volume: 18

    The purpose of this study was to investigate differences in family functioning between families with clinical subjects in paediatric age and families taken from the Italian population. To this aim we used the Family Adaptability and Cohesion Evaluation Scale (FACES). Participants were children diagnosed with a psychopathology, recruited into the psychiatry department in a Paediatric Hospital of Rome. A total of 106 families participated in the study. The non-pathological sample is composed by 2,543 parents in different age periods of the life-cycle. Results showed significant differences in family functioning between pathological and non-pathological samples. Specifically, families from the pathological sample (particularly the ones who experienced eating disorders) were more frequently located in extreme or mid-range regions of Olson's circumplex model (p < .001). These findings suggest some considerations that can be useful in therapeutic works with families in a clinical setting. Critical aspects and clinical applications are discussed.

    Topics: Adolescent; Child; Child, Preschool; Family; Feeding and Eating Disorders; Female; Humans; Male; Mental Disorders; Rome

2015
[Early signs and symptoms before the psychotic onset. A study on the Duration of Untreated Illness (DUI) in a sample of patients with diagnosis of "non-affective psychotic disorders"].
    La Clinica terapeutica, 2011, Volume: 162, Issue:1

    The aims of the study are to evaluate, in the Italian context, the presence and clinical features of early prodromal symptoms before the psychotic onset and, most of all, the duration of the period between the first onset of any psychiatric symptom and the psychotic onset (Duration of Untreated Illness).. The study was carried out on a sample of 296 inpatients with a diagnosis of "non-affective psychosis" enrolled in "Villa dei Fiori" inpatients Clinic in Rome. The retrospective analysis was developed using clinical records and clinical interview with patients and their parents. The evaluation of the psychotic onset and of DUI was assessed with the PANSS (Positive and Negative Symptoms Scale).. The mean DUI is 4.7 ± 4.4 years. We found a connection between DUI and early symptoms of psycosis: depressive symptoms (4.9; DS=5.0) were most frequently observed, followed by anxiety symptoms (5.1; DS=4.8), eating disorders (5.7; DS=3.0); obsessive symptoms (4.5; DS=3.6); social withdrawal (5.9; DS=4.9); psychotic like symptoms (2.6; DS=1.3). DUI resulted lower in psychotic like symptoms than in the depressive ones.. In Italy DUI turn out to be much longer than in other Country where do exists specialized services for early intervention. For this reason seem to be necessary to explore the opportunity to develop also in Italy specialized services for adolescents and young adults at risk and at their psychotic onset.

    Topics: Adult; Age of Onset; Anxiety; Behavioral Symptoms; Depression; Early Diagnosis; Feeding and Eating Disorders; Female; Hospitals, Psychiatric; Humans; Inpatients; Institutionalization; Male; Middle Aged; Obsessive Behavior; Psychotic Disorders; Retrospective Studies; Rome; Social Isolation; Time Factors; Young Adult

2011