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Dive into the research topics where Anne-Linda Camerini is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne-Linda Camerini.


Journal of Medical Internet Research | 2014

Interactive sections of an Internet-based intervention increase empowerment of chronic back pain patients: randomized controlled trial.

Silvia Riva; Anne-Linda Camerini; Ahmed Allam; Peter J. Schulz

Background Chronic back pain (CBP) represents a significant public health problem. As one of the most common causes of disability and sick leave, there is a need to develop cost-effective ways, such as Internet-based interventions, to help empower patients to manage their disease. Research has provided evidence for the effectiveness of Internet-based interventions in many fields, but it has paid little attention to the reasons why they are effective. Objective This study aims to assess the impact of interactive sections of an Internet-based self-management intervention on patient empowerment, their management of the disease, and, ultimately, health outcomes. Methods A total of 51 patients were recruited through their health care providers and randomly assigned to either an experimental group with full access to the Internet-based intervention or a control group that was denied access to the interactive sections and knew nothing thereof. The intervention took 8 weeks. A baseline, a mid-term after 4 weeks, and a final assessment after 8 weeks measured patient empowerment, physical exercise, medication misuse, and pain burden. Results All patients completed the study. Overall, the intervention had a moderate effect (F 1.52=2.83, P=.03, η2=0.30, d=0.55). Compared to the control group, the availability of interactive sections significantly increased patient empowerment (midterm assessment: mean difference=+1.2, P=.03, d=0.63; final assessment: mean difference=+0.8, P=.09, d=0.44) and reduced medication misuse (midterm assessment: mean difference=−1.5, P=.04, d=0.28; final assessment: mean difference=−1.6, P=.03, d=−0.55) in the intervention group. Both the frequency of physical exercise and pain burden decreased, but to equal measures in both groups. Conclusions Results suggest that interactive sections as part of Internet-based interventions can positively alter patients’ feelings of empowerment and help prevent medication misuse. Detrimental effects were not observed. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02114788; http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02114788 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6ROXYVoPR).


PLOS ONE | 2015

Health Literacy and Patient Empowerment: Separating Con-joined Twins in the Context of Chronic Low Back Pain

Anne-Linda Camerini; Peter J. Schulz

Objectives While health literacy has been widely considered key to patient empowerment, an alternative approach separates both concepts and distinguishes between dif-ferent types of patients according to their levels of health literacy and empowerment. These types are deemed to vary in their health-related actions and outcomes. In this study, we exam-ine the relationship between health literacy and patient empowerment and compare socio-demographic characteristics, health-related activities, and health outcomes in four types of pa-tients suffering from chronic low back pain (cLBP). Methods In a cross-sectional study, 273 cLBP patients from four Swiss can-tons (Vaud, Geneva, Fribourg, Ticino) and Lombardy (Italy) were invited by their healthcare providers to complete a self-administered paper-and-pencil questionnaire which assessed pa-tients’ health literacy, empowerment, involvement in the medical encounter, medication non-adherence, and perceived pain and functionality as a measure of health outcomes. Results Health literacy and patient empowerment were not significantly correlated with each other, r(271) = .09, p > .05, allowing to differentiate be-tween four types of patients based on their levels of health literacy and patient empowerment. Subsequent chi-square tests and analyses of variances revealed significant differences among patients that could, however, only be attributed to health literacy, as in the case of age and ed-ucational attainment, or patient empowerment, as in the case of patients’ involvement in the medical encounter. No significant differences were evident for gender, medication non-adherence, and health outcomes. Conclusion The study provides empirical evidence for the need to consider health literacy and patient empowerment as independent concepts in the context of cLBP but calls for further studies to be able to conclude on how the two concepts interact and determine health-related activities and outcomes.


BMJ Open | 2012

Health literacy, health empowerment and health information search in the field of MMR vaccination: a cross-sectional study protocol

Nicola Diviani; Anne-Linda Camerini; Danuta Reinholz; Alessandra Galfetti; Peter J. Schulz

Objectives Although public health offices have a detailed record of the vaccination coverage among adolescents in Switzerland, little is known about the factors that determine the decisions of parents to get their children vaccinated. Based on Schulz & Nakamotos Extended Health Empowerment Model, the present study aims at surveying parents of adolescents in Ticino (Switzerland) to get insights into the role of health literacy, health empowerment, information search behaviour and potential confounding variables that influence whether adolescents are not at all vaccinated, undervaccinated or fully covered against measles, mumps and rubella (MMR). Methods and analysis A survey including concepts of the Extended Health Empowerment Model will be administered to all families with adolescents attending the third year of middle school in Ticino. Subsequently, survey responses will be matched with actual data on MMR vaccination coverage of adolescents collected from the Cantonal Office of Public Health in Ticino. Discussion The results of this study will allow one to draw more comprehensive conclusions about the factors that play a role in parents’ decisions regarding the vaccination of their children. At the same time, the study will provide useful insights on which are the main issues to be considered when addressing parents (on an interpersonal as well as a mass communication level) regarding the vaccination of their children.


New Media & Society | 2018

The social inequalities of Internet access, its use, and the impact on children’s academic performance: Evidence from a longitudinal study in Switzerland:

Anne-Linda Camerini; Peter J. Schulz; Anne-Marie Jeannet

This longitudinal study explores differences in Internet access and use among school-aged children in Italian-speaking Switzerland and whether and how these differences contribute to inequalities in academic performance. Applying multilevel structural equation modeling with two-wave original survey data from 843 students, their parents, as well as students’ end-term school grades, we show that a family’s socio-economic status indirectly affects children’s school grades as lower parental income leads children to use the Internet more frequently for entertainment and online communication purposes. This form of Internet use also increases as children have more personal digital media devices. As children’s increased use of the Internet for entertainment and online communication worsens their academic performance, our results suggest that social inequalities due to children’s socio-economic status are reinforced by a second-order digital divide. We discuss potential reasons for our findings as well as their implications and recommendations for possible interventions.


Journal of Health Communication | 2018

Validity of Three Brief Health Literacy Screeners to Measure Functional Health Literacy – Evidence from Five Different Countries

Sarah Mantwill; Ahmed Allam; Anne-Linda Camerini; Peter J. Schulz

Self-reported health literacy measures have seen increased application throughout the last years, among those are the brief health literacy screeners (BHLS) developed by Chew and colleagues (2004). There has been little systematic research on the performance of these measures across different contexts, including countries and languages, to draw conclusions about their predictive power outside of the United States. This study aimed at replicating the original validation of the BHLS. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis was applied to data from Hungary, Italy, Lebanon, Switzerland, and Turkey. In addition, logistic regression models incorporating ROC analysis using BHLS as predictors were compared to models using socio-demographics only to identify individuals with inadequate and inadequate or marginal health literacy as measured with the Short Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults. Analyses showed that in all cases the BHLS were not sufficiently able to identify individuals with different health literacy levels. Logistic regression models using socio-demographics only as predictors outperformed models using the BHLS. The findings highlight the limitations of using the BHLS outside the United States. Further, they question in how far self-reported health literacy measures are comparable across different contexts and whether thresholds for different health literacy levels are universally applicable.


Patient Education and Counseling | 2013

Do participation and personalization matter? A model-driven evaluation of an Internet-based patient education intervention for fibromyalgia patients

Luca Camerini; Anne-Linda Camerini; Peter J. Schulz


Patient Education and Counseling | 2016

Patients' need for information provision and perceived participation in decision making in doctor-patient consultation: Micro-cultural differences between French- and Italian-speaking Switzerland.

Anne-Linda Camerini; Peter J. Schulz


Studies in communication sciences | 2015

“What's in it for us?” Six dyadic networking strategies in academia

Nanon Labrie; Rebecca Amati; Anne-Linda Camerini; Marta Zampa; Claudia Zanini


Child Indicators Research | 2018

Social Desirability Bias in Child-Report Social Well-Being: Evaluation of the Children’s Social Desirability Short Scale Using Item Response Theory and Examination of Its Impact on Self-Report Family and Peer Relationships

Anne-Linda Camerini; Peter J. Schulz


Archive | 2015

Feeling empowered? Der Einfluss interaktiver Applikationen von E-Health-Interventionen auf die Ermächtigung von Patientinnen und Patienten mit chronischen Rückenschmerzen

Anne-Linda Camerini; Peter J. Schulz

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