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Featured researches published by Alice Mulè.


Psychiatry Investigation | 2012

Do Child Abuse and Maltreatment Increase Risk of Schizophrenia

Lucia Sideli; Alice Mulè; Daniele La Barbera; Robin M. Murray

Introduction IntroductionaaAlthough childhood abuse is a recognised risk factor for depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and substance misuse, its role in the aetiology of psychotic disorder remained controversial. This is in part because the putative effect of childhood trauma on psychosis has been mostly evaluated by small, cross sectional, uncontrolled studies that raised methodological issues. Methods Papers concerning the association between childhood trauma and psychotic disorders (to November, 2011) were identified using a comprehensive search of PubMed, Psychinfo, and Scopus and analysing reference list of relevant papers. A narrative synthesis was used to summarise results. Results An association between childhood abuse and psychotic symptoms was consistently reported by large cross sectional surveys with an effect ranging from 1.7 to 15. However, we cannot conclude that the relationship is causal as lack of longitudinal studies prevent us from fully excluding alternative explanations such as reverse causality. Gender, cannabis use, and depressive and post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms appear to moderate the effect of childhood trauma on psychotic disorders. However, specificity of childhood abuse in psychotic disorders and, particularly, in schizophrenia has not been demonstrated. Conclusion Although the association between childhood abuse and psychosis has been replicated, the etiological role of such early adversity has yet to be fully clarified. So far none of the studies reported support the hypothesis that childhood abuse is either sufficient or necessary to develop a psychotic disorder. It seems likely that any effect of childhood abuse on schizophrenia needs to be understood in terms of genetic susceptibility and interaction with other environmental risk factors.


Schizophrenia Research | 2013

Prevalence of bullying victimisation amongst first-episode psychosis patients and unaffected controls

Antonella Trotta; Marta Di Forti; Valeria Mondelli; Paola Dazzan; Carmine M. Pariante; Anthony S. David; Alice Mulè; Laura Ferraro; Ivan Formica; Robin M. Murray; Helen L. Fisher

BACKGROUND Despite increasing evidence suggesting that childhood maltreatment is significantly associated with psychosis, the specific role of bullying in the onset of psychotic disorders is still unclear. This study aimed to examine whether bullying was more prevalent amongst individuals presenting to services for the first time with a psychotic disorder than in unaffected community controls. METHODS Data on exposure to bullying, psychotic symptoms, cannabis use and history of conduct disorder were collected cross-sectionally from 222 first-presentation psychosis cases and 215 geographically-matched controls. Bullying victimisation was assessed retrospectively as part of the Brief Life Events schedule. Logistic regression was used to examine associations between exposure to bullying and case-control status, while controlling for potential confounders. RESULTS Psychosis cases were approximately twice as likely to report bullying victimisation when compared to controls. No significant interactions between bullying and either gender or cannabis use were found. Controls reporting being a victim of bullying were approximately twice as likely to also report at least one psychosis-like symptom. CONCLUSIONS Our results extend previous research by suggesting that bullying victimisation may contribute to vulnerability to develop a psychotic disorder in some individuals.


International Review of Psychiatry | 2012

The family in Italy: Cultural changes and implications for treatment

Mario Luciano; Gaia Sampogna; Valeria Del Vecchio; Domenico Giacco; Alice Mulè; Corrado De Rosa; Andrea Fiorillo; Mario Maj

Abstract In Italy family is characterized by strong ties and is based on mutual aid of all its members. In the last 20 years, the structure of families has been significantly influenced by demographic, economic and professional changes, determining a transition from a patriarchal to a nuclear family model, with a higher number of single-parent families, single-person households, childless couples, same-sex couples. However, this transition has been slower than that occurring in other countries, probably as an ongoing impact of prevalent Catholic ideology. Major demographic changes in Italian families include, 1) a decrease in the number of marriages, delays in getting married and an high number of civil ceremonies, 2) a reduced birth rate; Italy is becoming one of the European countries with lowest growth rate, and with an increasing number of births out of wedlock, 3) an increased marital instability, with a constantly growing number of legal separations. Like many countries, relatives in Italy are highly involved in the care of patients with physical and mental disorders. There are a number of psychosocial interventions used in Italy including the ‘Milan Systemic Approach’ and family psycho-educational interventions. However, there are difficulties in implementing these interventions which are highlighted in this paper. We recommend research strategies to identify the best options to involve families in the care of mentally ill patients and to adequately support them.


JAMA Psychiatry | 2018

Treated Incidence of Psychotic Disorders in the Multinational EU-GEI Study

Hannah Jongsma; Charlotte Gayer-Anderson; Antonio Lasalvia; Diego Quattrone; Alice Mulè; Andrei Szöke; Jean-Paul Selten; Caitlin Turner; Celso Arango; Ilaria Tarricone; Domenico Berardi; Andrea Tortelli; Pierre-Michel Llorca; Lieuwe de Haan; Julio Bobes; Miguel Bernardo; Julio Sanjuán; José Luis Santos; Manuel Arrojo; Cristina Marta Del-Ben; Paulo Rossi Menezes; Robin M. Murray; Bart P.F. Rutten; Peter B. Jones; Jim van Os; Craig Morgan; James B. Kirkbride

Importance Psychotic disorders contribute significantly to the global disease burden, yet the latest international incidence study of psychotic disorders was conducted in the 1980s. Objectives To estimate the incidence of psychotic disorders using comparable methods across 17 catchment areas in 6 countries and to examine the variance between catchment areas by putative environmental risk factors. Design, Setting, and Participants An international multisite incidence study (the European Network of National Schizophrenia Networks Studying Gene-Environment Interactions) was conducted from May 1, 2010, to April 1, 2015, among 2774 individuals from England (2 catchment areas), France (3 catchment areas), Italy (3 catchment areas), the Netherlands (2 catchment areas), Spain (6 catchment areas), and Brazil (1 catchment area) with a first episode of nonorganic psychotic disorders (International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision [ICD-10] codes F20-F33) confirmed by the Operational Criteria Checklist. Denominator populations were estimated using official national statistics. Exposures Age, sex, and racial/ethnic minority status were treated as a priori confounders. Latitude, population density, percentage unemployment, owner-occupied housing, and single-person households were treated as catchment area–level exposures. Main Outcomes and Measures Incidence of nonorganic psychotic disorders (ICD-10 codes F20-F33), nonaffective psychoses (ICD-10 codes F20-F29), and affective psychoses (ICD-10 codes F30-F33) confirmed by the Operational Criteria Checklist. Results A total of 2774 patients (1196 women and 1578 men; median age, 30.5 years [interquartile range, 23.0-41.0 years]) with incident cases of psychotic disorders were identified during 12.9 million person-years at risk (crude incidence, 21.4 per 100 000 person-years; 95% CI, 19.4-23.4 per 100 000 person-years). A total of 2183 patients (78.7%) had nonaffective psychotic disorders. After direct standardization for age, sex, and racial/ethnic minority status, an 8-fold variation was seen in the incidence of all psychotic disorders, from 6.0 (95% CI, 3.5-8.6) per 100 000 person-years in Santiago, Spain, to 46.1 (95% CI, 37.3-55.0) per 100 000 person-years in Paris, France. Rates were elevated in racial/ethnic minority groups (incidence rate ratio, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.5-1.7), were highest for men 18 to 24 years of age, and were lower in catchment areas with more owner-occupied homes (incidence rate ratio, 0.8; 95% CI, 0.7-0.8). Similar patterns were observed for nonaffective psychoses; a lower incidence of affective psychoses was associated with higher area-level unemployment (incidence rate ratio, 0.3; 95% CI, 0.2-0.5). Conclusions and Relevance This study confirmed marked heterogeneity in risk for psychotic disorders by person and place, including higher rates in younger men, racial/ethnic minorities, and areas characterized by a lower percentage of owner-occupied houses.


European Psychiatry | 2014

Failure to find association between childhood abuse and cognition in first-episode psychosis patients

Lucia Sideli; Helen L. Fisher; Manuela Russo; Robin M. Murray; Simona A. Stilo; Benjamin Wiffen; Jennifer O’Connor; M. Aurora Falcone; Sonia Pintore; Laura Ferraro; Alice Mulè; D. La Barbera; Craig Morgan; M. Di Forti

This study investigated the relationship between severe childhood abuse and cognitive functions in first-episode psychosis patients and geographically-matched controls. Reports of any abuse were associated with lower scores in the executive function domain in the control group. However, in contrast with our hypothesis, no relationships were found amongst cases.


International Journal of Social Psychiatry | 2014

Pathways to mental health care in Italy: Results from a multicenter study

Umberto Volpe; Andrea Fiorillo; Mario Luciano; Valeria Del Vecchio; Claudia Palumbo; Salvatore Calò; S Piras; Maria Salvina Signorelli; Dario Filippo; Massimiliano Piselli; Pasquale De Fazio; S Gotelli; Francesco Bardicchia; Giancarlo Cerveri; S. Ferrari; Alice Mulè; Michele Ribolsi; Gaia Sampogna; Corrado De Rosa; Norman Sartorius

Background and aims: In Italy, the reform of the mental health system in 1978 should have drastically changed the provision of care and pathways of patients seeking to obtain it. The aim of this article is to examine the current pathways to psychiatric care in Italy. Methods: We used a method developed in the World Health Organization international collaborative studies to investigate pathways to care in 15 Italian mental health centers. We recruited 420 patients with a psychiatric illness and explored the care pathways they took to reach to psychiatric services and the delays from the onset of illness to reaching psychiatric care. Results: The majority of patients (33.8%) had direct access to mental health care, whereas the others arrived to a specialist in psychiatry through general hospitals (20.3%), general practitioners (33.0%) or private practitioners (9.8%). The main diagnosis for referral was neurotic disorder (36.6%), followed by affective disorder (35.4%) and psychotic disorder (11.5%). The delay from onset of illness to psychiatric care was greater for patients with psychotic disorders than for those with affective and neurotic disorders. The most frequently prescribed treatments were pharmacotherapy (56%), psychological support (8%), and psychotherapy (7.0%); 15% of the patients received no treatment. Conclusions: Our multicenter study shows that although general practitioners and hospital doctors are still the main referral point for mental health care, a greater proportion of patients are first seen in private settings or directly reach mental health centers, compared to previous surveys conducted in Italy. However, a stronger collaboration of psychiatrists with general practitioners and psychologists is still needed.


annual review of cybertherapy and telemedicine | 2009

Eating disorders on the web: risks and resources.

Alice Mulè; Lucia Sideli

Our work is aimed at exploring the recent literature data on web sites, forums, and blogs, which promote eating disorders as normal life styles and their implication in the changes of the psychopatology of such disorders. We also want to understand whether new technologies have an impact in the course of the disorders or, on the other hand, whether they can also represent an instrument for searching help or information about them. The search strategy included a search of PsycINFO, Medline, and Ovid databases to identify research reports about pro-ana sites and their implication on the course of anorexia using the following key words: pro-ana, thinspiration, anorexia-web, online help eating disorders, anorexia nation.


Psychosis | 2014

Searching for the truth about schizophrenia requires the application of similarly high standards of proof to biological and social risk factors

Robin M. Murray; Lucia Sideli; Alice Mulè; Daniele La Barbera

In their provocative paper, Bentall and Varese (2012) criticize our review on child abuse and schizophrenia (Sideli, Mulè, La Barbera, & Murray, 2012) and suggest that we have a biological bias which causes us to apply more stringent criteria when evaluating causality in psychosocial than bio-genetic research. This critique surprises us, as of the review’s two senior authors, one (RMM) has recently coauthored a paper on a “sociodevelopmental model of schizophrenia” (Morgan, Charalambides, Hutchinson, & Murray, 2010) while the other (DLB) has a proud record in psychosocial and therapeutic aspects of psychiatry – we are hardly a troupe of hard-line reductionists! Furthermore, not only did our review recognize the significant association between child abuse and positive psychotic symptoms, but our group has also contributed to the literature on this subject (Aas et al., 2011; Fisher et al., 2009; Fisher et al., 2010; Mondelli et al., 2010; Schäfer et al., 2011; Sideli et al., in press); indeed, while complaining about our review, Bentall and Varese (2012) quote our group’s research in support of the reliability of patients’ accounts of abuse (Fisher et al., 2011). Bentall and Varese criticize us for saying that “none of the studies reported indicate that child abuse is either necessary or sufficient to develop a psychotics disorder”. They do not, however, contest this statement which is, of course, true not only for child abuse but for all putative causes of psychosis including other risk factors which our group has investigated, e.g. susceptibility genes, obstetric factors and cannabis abuse. Bentall and Varese complain that “shockingly, the Sideli review concludes that ‘the possibility cannot be excluded that a child destined to develop schizophrenia may show characteristics in childhood that increase the risk of abuse’”. In response, we would gently remind them that developmental anomalies and childhood psychopathology, which often precede schizophrenia (Welham, Isohanni, Jones, &


International Journal of Social Psychiatry | 2016

Perceived insecurity, mental health and urbanization: Results from a multicentric study

Mario Luciano; C. De Rosa; V. Del Vecchio; Gaia Sampogna; D. Sbordone; Anna Rita Atti; Francesco Bardicchia; F Bertossi; Salvatore Calò; L Cava; M Ciafone; P De Fazio; G Di Iorio; E Fantini; S. Ferrari; A Ginanneschi; S Gotelli; A Macina; Alice Mulè; D Papanti; Luca Pingani; F Pinna; Massimiliano Piselli; Signorelli; Ilaria Tarricone; Lorenzo Tarsitani; Antonio Ventriglio; Giuseppe Carrà; F. Catapano; Andrea Fiorillo

Aims: This article aims to (1) explore the levels of perceived insecurity in a sample of patients with mood or anxiety disorders and (2) assess whether living in ‘big cities’ can influence the levels of patients’ perceived insecurity and social contacts compared to living in a non-urbanized context. Methods: A total of 24 Italian mental health centers (MHCs) have been invited to participate. Twenty patients consecutively accessing the MHC have been recruited. All patients have been assessed using validated assessment tools. Results: The sample consisted of 426 patients, mostly female, with a mean age of 45 years. Globally, 52.2% of patients had a diagnosis of mood disorders, and 37.8% had anxiety disorders. Half of the sample declared that the main feeling toward life is uncertainty; higher levels of pessimistic views toward life have been detected in patients living in urban areas. A positive association between negative attitudes toward life and higher levels of depressive and anxiety symptoms, poor social functioning and higher levels of perceived psychological distress has been found. Conclusion: Our findings confirm the presence of a common sense of perceived uncertainty among our sample. Such attitude toward life can have a detrimental impact on patients’ psychological and physical well-being, contributing to high levels of distress.


BMC Psychiatry | 2014

First-episode psychosis and migration in Italy (PEP-Ita migration): a study in the Italian mental health services

Ilaria Tarricone; Mauro Braca; Fabio Allegri; Giuseppe Barrasso; Antonello Bellomo; Vanna Berlincioni; Bernardo Carpiniello; Alessio Ceregato; Marco Conforti Donati; Samuele Defilippi; Valeria Del Vecchio; Corrado De Rosa; Luigi Ferrannini; S. Ferrari; Maria Antonietta Furio; C. Gramaglia; Caterina La Cascia; Mario Luciano; Alice Mulè; Marcello Nardini; Francesca Podavini; Diego Primavera; C. Reggianini; M. Rigatelli; Orlando Todarello; Elena Turella; Antonio Ventriglio; P. Zeppegno; Andrea Fiorillo; Domenico Berardi

BackgroundIt has been frequently reported a higher incidence of psychotic disorders in immigrants than in native populations. There is, however, a lack of knowledge about risk factors which may explain this phenomenon. A better understanding of the causes of psychosis among first-generation migrants is highly needed, particularly in Italy, a country with a recent massive migration.Methods/DesignThe “Italian study on first-episode psychosis and migration (PEP-Ita)” is a prospective observational study over a two-year period (1 January 2012–31 December 2013) which will be carried out in 11 Italian mental health centres. All participating centres will collect data about all new cases of migrants with first-episode psychosis. The general purpose (“core”) of the PEP-Ita study is to explore the socio-demographic and clinical characteristics, and the pathways to care of a population of first-episode psychosis migrants in Italy. Secondary aims of the study will be: 1) to understand risk and protective factors for the development of psychotic disorders in migrants; 2) to evaluate the correlations between psychopathology of psychotic disorders in migrants and socio-demographic characteristics, migration history, life experiences; 3) to evaluate the clinical and social outcomes of first-episode psychoses in migrants.DiscussionThe results of the PEP-Ita study will allow a better understanding of risk factors for psychosis in first-generation migrants in Italy. Moreover, our results will contribute to the development of prevention programmes for psychosis and to the improvement of early intervention treatments for the migrant population in Italy.

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M. Di Forti

University of Cambridge

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