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Dive into the research topics where Carlo Alfredo Clerici is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Carlo Alfredo Clerici.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2015

Clouds of Oxygen: Adolescents With Cancer Tell Their Story in Music

Andrea Ferrari; Laura Veneroni; Carlo Alfredo Clerici; Michela Casanova; Stefano Chiaravalli; Chiara Magni; Roberto Luksch; Monica Terenziani; Filippo Spreafico; Daniela Polastri; Cristina Meazza; Serena Catania; Elisabetta Schiavello; Veronica Biassoni; Marta Podda; Luca Bergamaschi; Nadia Puma; Carla Moscheo; Giacomo Gotti; Maura Massimino

Andrea Ferrari, Michela Casanova, Stefano Chiaravalli, Chiara Magni, Roberto Luksch, Monica Terenziani, Filippo Spreafico, Daniela Polastri, Cristina Meazza, Serena Catania, Elisabetta Schiavello, Veronica Biassoni, Marta Podda, Luca Bergamaschi, Nadia Puma, Carla Moscheo, Giacomo Gotti, Maura Massimino, Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale Tumori; Laura Veneroni, Carlo Alfredo Clerici, University of Milan, Milan, Italy.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2009

Complementary and alternative medical therapies used by children with cancer treated at an italian pediatric oncology unit

Carlo Alfredo Clerici; Laura Veneroni; Barbara Giacon; Luigi Mariani; Franca Fossati-Bellani

Research has identified a growing use of complementary and alternative medicines (CAM) in the pediatric oncology setting and health care professionals should consider how they might interact with and/or be used in lieu of conventional treatment. The present study was designed to establish the prevalence of CAM usage at an Italian pediatric oncology department, and the reasons why patients used these unconventional therapies.


Journal of Pediatric Hematology Oncology | 2012

Videos on rhabdomyosarcoma on youtube: An example of the availability of information on pediatric tumors on the web

Carlo Alfredo Clerici; Laura Veneroni; Gianni Bisogno; Alessandro Trapuzzano; Andrea Ferrari

Purpose: Video-sharing sites have become increasingly important in recent years in providing information and orienting people’s decisions relating to their health. Adolescents and their families use internet to obtain information on pediatric oncological diseases. Methods: We describe the availability and type of video content and origin on YouTube relating to a particular set of pediatric neoplastic diseases, that is, rhabdomyosarcoma and soft-tissue sarcoma. Results: A total of 149 videos were analyzed: 25 were considered as useful; only 1 video was produced by a doctor, whereas 82.5% were produced by patients or their families, in many cases for commemorating the death of a child. Conclusions: Our observations indicate that video-sharing sites have become tools, such as blogs and social media, that make it easier for patients to describe their impressions and experiences of the disease, and this could help other patients devise strategies for coping with the disease, providing them with support and opportunities for sharing information and resources.


Tumori | 2012

The Youth Project at the Istituto Nazionale Tumori in Milan.

Andrea Ferrari; Carlo Alfredo Clerici; Michela Casanova; Roberto Luksch; Monica Terenziani; Filippo Spreafico; Daniela Polastri; Cristina Meazza; Laura Veneroni; Serena Catania; Elisabetta Schiavello; Veronica Biassoni; Marta Podda; Maura Massimino

The paper describes the key issues of the Youth Project launched in 2011 at the pediatric oncology unit of the Istituto Nazionale Tumori in Milan dedicated to adolescents (over 15 years old) and young adults (up to 25 years old) with solid tumors. The Youth Project was developed within the pediatric oncology unit in the conviction that adolescent patients may benefit from the multidisciplinary team typical of the pediatric oncology setting, as well as the expertise in treating pediatric-type malignancies and enrolling patients in clinical trials. The project was an offshoot of existing activities, making no major changes to the hospitals organization and posing no major demands on the institutions administration and board. Patients are managed by the pediatric oncology staff, but they have access to particular services (e.g., regarding their psychosocial support, fertility preserving measures, access to care after completing therapy); dedicated, adequately equipped multifunctional rooms have been provided. The location of the pediatric unit within a cancer referral center and the cooperation with divisions dedicated to adults have played an important role in the projects creation.


Tumori | 2015

Creating Beauty: The Experience of a Fashion Collection Prepared by Adolescent Patients at a Pediatric Oncology Unit:

Laura Veneroni; Carlo Alfredo Clerici; Tullio Proserpio; Chiara Magni; Giovanna Sironi; Stefano Chiaravalli; Luisa Roncari; Michela Casanova; Lorenza Gandola; Maura Massimino; Andrea Ferrari

Aims and Background Adolescent patients with cancer need psychological support in order to face the traumatic event of cancer diagnosis and to preserve continuity with their normal lives. Creative projects or laboratories may help young patients express their thoughts and feelings. Methods The Youth Project developed activities dedicated to adolescents to give them a chance to vent their creative spirit and express themselves freely. In the first project, the teenagers designed their own fashion collection in all its various stages under the artistic direction of a well-known fashion designer, creating their own brand name (B.Live), and organized a fashion show. Results In all, 24 patients from 15 to 20 years old took part in the project. The fashion project proved a fundamental resource in helping the young patients involved to regain a positive self-image and the feeling that they could take action, both on themselves and in their relations with others. Conclusions Facilitating the experience of beauty may enable hope to withstand the anguish caused by disease. This experience integrated the usual forms of psychological support to offer patients a form of expression and support during the course of their treatment.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2016

The Sooner the Better? How Symptom Interval Correlates With Outcome in Children and Adolescents With Solid Tumors: Regression Tree Analysis of the Findings of a Prospective Study

Andrea Ferrari; Salvatore Lo Vullo; Daniele Giardiello; Laura Veneroni; Chiara Magni; Carlo Alfredo Clerici; Stefano Chiaravalli; Michela Casanova; Roberto Luksch; Monica Terenziani; Filippo Spreafico; Cristina Meazza; Serena Catania; Elisabetta Schiavello; Veronica Biassoni; Marta Podda; Luca Bergamaschi; Nadia Puma; Maura Massimino; Luigi Mariani

The potential impact of diagnostic delays on patients’ outcomes is a debated issue in pediatric oncology and discordant results have been published so far. We attempted to tackle this issue by analyzing a prospective series of 351 consecutive children and adolescents with solid malignancies using innovative statistical tools.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2012

Parent–child communication and psychological adjustment in children with a brain tumor

Annarita Adduci; Momcilo Jankovic; Sandra Strazzer; Maura Massimino; Carlo Alfredo Clerici; Geraldina Poggi

Internalizing problems, anxiety, depression, withdrawal, and consequent social problems are frequently observed in children with brain tumors. The objective of this work is to describe the relationship between these psychological problems and the type of parent–child communication established about the disease.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2016

Measuring the efficacy of a project for adolescents and young adults with cancer: A study from the Milan Youth Project

Andrea Ferrari; Matteo Silva; Laura Veneroni; Chiara Magni; Carlo Alfredo Clerici; Cristina Meazza; Monica Terenziani; Filippo Spreafico; Stefano Chiaravalli; Michela Casanova; Roberto Luksch; Serena Catania; Elisabetta Schiavello; Veronica Biassoni; Marta Podda; Luca Bergamaschi; Nadia Puma; Alice Indini; Tullio Proserpio; Maura Massimino

Various projects dedicated specifically to adolescents and young adults (AYA) with cancer have been developed in recent years. A critical aspect of such programs is the ability to demonstrate its value, and therefore how to measure desired outcomes.


Journal of Interpersonal Violence | 2015

Transphobic Murders in Italy: An Overview of Homicides in Milan (Italy) in the Past Two Decades (1993-2012)

Antonio Prunas; Carlo Alfredo Clerici; Guendalina Gentile; Enrico Muccino; Laura Veneroni; Riccardo Zoja

In Europe, 71 murders resulting in the death of transgendered persons were reported between 2008 and 2013, 20 of which perpetrated in Italy, the second highest rate in Europe after Turkey. We retrospectively analyzed the homicides of transgender people recorded at the Medicolegal Bureau in Milan from January 1993 to December 2012. First we considered the sociodemographic data of 20 victims and the circumstantial details of their deaths, then we examined the data related to the cause of death from the autopsy reports. Our data show that victims are mostly immigrants, biological males presenting with a feminine attire and with varying degrees of feminization. The large majority of the victims were sex workers from South America. As for murderers, they were unknown in 7 cases (35%); all the 13 murderers identified were males, aged between 17 and 63 (M age = 31 years). In 38% of the cases, the murderer was the victim’s current or former partner. For half of the homicides, it was possible to identify at least one primary indicator of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) hate crime. Our findings call for the need to make explicit in Italian legislation that a crime perpetrated on the ground of sexual orientation and gender identity constitutes a hate crime.


Tumori | 2017

“Christmas Balls”: a Christmas carol by the adolescent cancer patients of the Milan Youth Project

Andrea Ferrari; Stefano Signoroni; Matteo Silva; Paola Gaggiotti; Laura Veneroni; Chiara Magni; Michela Casanova; Stefano Chiaravalli; Mirko Capelletti; Pietro Lapidari; Carlo Alfredo Clerici; Maura Massimino

The Youth Project is a program developed at the Pediatric Oncology Unit at the Istituto Nazionale Tumori in Milan, dedicated to adolescents and young adults with cancer. Among its various goals, the Youth Project organizes structured creative activities with the support of professionals, with the objective of offering young people a new way to express their hopes and fears. This article describes a project centered around music: patients created a Christmas carol with the help of musicians and authors. The adolescents explained with their own words the meaning of the lyrics, telling the story of a Christmas spent in a cancer hospital ward.

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Maura Massimino

National Institutes of Health

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Andrea Ferrari

University Hospital of Basel

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Tullio Proserpio

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Veronica Biassoni

Boston Children's Hospital

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Graziella Cefalo

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Franca Fossati-Bellani

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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