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Dive into the research topics where Giovanni Gambassi is active.

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Featured researches published by Giovanni Gambassi.


BMJ | 1998

Randomised trial of impact of model of integrated care and case management for older people living in the community

Roberto Bernabei; Francesco Landi; Giovanni Gambassi; Antonio Sgadari; Giuseppe Zuccalà; Vincent Mor; Laurence Z. Rubenstein; Pierugo Carbonin

Abstract Objective: To evaluate the impact of a programme of integrated social and medical care among frail elderly people living in the community. Design: Randomised study with 1 year follow up. Setting: Town in northern Italy (Rovereto). Subjects: 200 older people already receiving conventional community care services. Intervention: Random allocation to an intervention group receiving integrated social and medical care and case management or to a control group receiving conventional care. Main outcome measures: Admission to an institution, use and costs of health services, variations in functional status. Results: Survival analysis showed that admission to hospital or nursing home in the intervention group occurred later and was less common than in controls (hazard ratio 0.69; 95% confidence interval 0.53 to 0.91). Health services were used to the same extent, but control subjects received more frequent home visits by general practitioners. In the intervention group the estimated financial savings were in the order of £1125 (


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2002

Adverse Drug Reactions as Cause of Hospital Admissions: Results from the Italian Group of Pharmacoepidemiology in the Elderly (GIFA)

Graziano Onder; Claudio Pedone; Francesco Landi; Matteo Cesari; Cecilia Della Vedova; Roberto Bernabei; Giovanni Gambassi

1800) per year of follow up. The intervention group had improved physical function (activities of daily living score improved by 5.1% v 13.0% loss in controls; P<0.001). Decline of cognitive status (measured by the short portable mental status questionnaire) was also reduced (3.8% v 9.4%; P<0.05). Conclusion: Integrated social and medical care with case management programmes may provide a cost effective approach to reduce admission to institutions and functional decline in older people living in the community. Key messages Responsibility for management of care of elderly people living in the community is poorly defined Integration of medical and social services together with care management programmes would improve such care in the community In a comparison of this option with a traditional and fragmented model of community care the integrated care approach reduced admission to institutions and functional decline in frail elderly people living in the community and also reduced costs


Medical Care | 2000

Minimum data set for home care: a valid instrument to assess frail older people living in the community.

Francesco Landi; Ennio Tua; Graziano Onder; Benigno Carrara; Antonio Sgadari; Carmela Rinaldi; Giovanni Gambassi; Fabrizia Lattanzio; Roberto Bernabei

OBJECTIVES: To determine the prevalence of adverse drug reaction (ADR)‐related hospital admissions in an older population, to describe the most common clinical manifestations and drugs most frequently responsible for ADR‐related hospital admissions, and to identify independent factors predictive of these ADRs.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1999

Correlates and Management of Nonmalignant Pain in the Nursing Home

Aida Won; Kate L. Lapane; Giovanni Gambassi; Roberto Bernabei; Vince Mor; Lewis A. Lipsitz

Background.Optimal care for frail elderly patients depends on comprehensive assessment. This is especially true in the complex setting of interdisciplinary home care programs. To facilitate comprehensive assessment, as well as to generate a useful, policy-relevant patient database, standardized, multidimensional, and validated instruments are very helpful. Objectives.The aim of the present study was to demonstrate that the Minimum Data Set assessment instrument for Home Care (MDS-HC) can be used to detect functional and cognitive impairment as defined by analogous research instruments. Research Design.This was a cross-sectional correlation study. Subjects.We studied 95 patients admitted to home care services of the Health Care Agency of Bergamo (Italy). Measures.The MDS-HC form was completed for all patients by well-trained nurses, independently of and with nurses blinded to the results from the research rating scales. The Barthel Activities of Daily Living (ADL) Index, the Instrumental Activities of Daily Living of Lawton (IADL), and the Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) were considered the gold standard. Results.Agreement between the MDS-HC scales and the research rating scales was assessed with Pearson’s correlation coefficient. This coefficient was 0.74 for MDS-ADL versus Barthel Index, 0.81 for MDS-IADL versus Lawton Index, and 0.81 for Cognitive Performance Scale versus MMSE, indicating an excellent agreement. Conclusions.The MDS-HC scales, when performed by trained nurses using recommended protocols, provide a valid measure of function and cognitive status in frail home care patients. These findings point out the overall validity of the functional and clinical data contained in the MDS-HC assessment. Use of the MDS-HC gives the unique opportunity of setting up a database, a prerequisite for all epidemiological evidence-based medicine studies.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1999

Body mass index and mortality among older people living in the community.

Francesco Landi; Giuseppe Zuccalà; Giovanni Gambassi; Raffaele Antonelli Incalzi; Luca Manigrasso; Francesco Pagano; Pierugo Carbonin; Roberto Bernabei

Nonmalignant pain is a common problem among older people. The prevalence of pain in the nursing home is not well studied. We looked at the association between nonmalignant pain, psychological and functional health, and the practice patterns for pain management in the nursing home.


Age and Ageing | 2014

The frailty phenotype and the frailty index: different instruments for different purposes

Matteo Cesari; Giovanni Gambassi; Gabor Abellan van Kan; Bruno Vellas

OBJECTIVES: To determine if body mass index (BMI = weight/height2), predictive of mortality in seriously ill hospitalized and institutionalized patients, is also predictive of mortality in a longitudinal epidemiologic study.


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2000

Pharmacologic treatment can prevent pancreatic injury after ERCP: a meta-analysis

Angelo Andriulli; Gioacchino Leandro; G. Niro; Alessandra Mangia; Virginia Festa; Giovanni Gambassi; Maria Rosaria Villani; Domenico Facciorusso; Pasquale Conoscitore; Fulvio Spirito; Giovanni De Maio

The integration of frailty measures in clinical practice is crucial for the development of interventions against disabling conditions in older persons. The frailty phenotype (proposed and validated by Fried and colleagues in the Cardiovascular Health Study) and the Frailty Index (proposed and validated by Rockwood and colleagues in the Canadian Study of Health and Aging) represent the most known operational definitions of frailty in older persons. Unfortunately, they are often wrongly considered as alternatives and/or substitutables. These two instruments are indeed very different and should rather be considered as complementary. In the present paper, we discuss about the designs and rationals of the two instruments, proposing the correct ways for having them implemented in the clinical setting.


American Heart Journal | 2000

Management of heart failure among very old persons living in long-term care: Has the voice of trials spread?☆☆☆★★★

Giovanni Gambassi; Daniel E. Forman; Kate L. Lapane; Vincent Mor; Antonio Sgadari; Lewis A. Lipsitz; Roberto Bernabei

BACKGROUND The identification of therapeutic agents that can prevent the pancreatic injury after endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is of considerable importance. METHODS We performed a meta-analysis including 28 clinical trials on the use of somatostatin (12 studies), octreotide (10 studies), and gabexate mesilate (6 studies) after ERCP. Outcome measures evaluated were the incidence of acute pancreatitis, hyperamylasemia, and pancreatic pain. Three analyses were run separately: for all available studies, for randomized trials only, and for only those studies published as complete reports. RESULTS When all available studies were analyzed, somatostatin and gabexate mesilate were significantly associated with improvements in all three outcomes. Odds ratios (OR) for gabexate mesilate were 0.27 (95% CI [0.13, 0. 57], p = 0.001) for acute pancreatitis, 0.66 (95% CI [0.48, -0.89], p = 0.007) for hyperamylasemia, and 0.33 (95% CI [0.18, 0.58], p = 0. 0005) for post-procedural pain. Somatostatin reduced acute pancreatitis (OR 0.38: 95% CI [0.22, 0.65], p < 0.001), pain (OR 0. 24: 95% CI [0.14, 0.42], p < 0.001), and hyperamylasemia (OR 0.65: 95% CI [0.48, 0.90], p = 0.008). Octreotide was associated only with a reduced risk of post-ERCP hyperamylasemia (OR 0.51: 95% CI [0.31, 0.83], p = 0.007) but had no effect on acute pancreatitis and pain. The statistical significance of data did not change after analyzing randomized trials only or studies published as complete reports. For each considered outcome, the publication bias assessment and the number of patients that need to be treated to prevent one adverse effect were, respectively, higher and lower for somatostatin than for gabexate mesilate. CONCLUSIONS The pancreatic injury after ERCP can be prevented with the administration of either somatostatin or gabexate mesilate, but the former agent is more cost-effective. Additional studies comparing the efficacy of short-term infusion of somatostatin versus gabexate mesilate in patients at high risk for post-ERCP complications seem warranted.


Aging Clinical and Experimental Research | 2004

Community care in Europe. The Aged in HOme Care project (AdHOC)

Iain Carpenter; Giovanni Gambassi; Eva Topinkova; Marianne Schroll; Harriett Finne-Soveri; Jean-Claude Henrard; Vjenka Garms-Homolová; Palmi V. Jonsson; Dinnus Frijters; Gunnar Ljunggren; Liv Wergeland Sørbye; Cordula Wagner; Graziano Onder; Claudio Pedone; Roberto Bernabei

Abstract Background Increasing prevalence, use of health services, and number of deaths have made congestive heart failure (CHF) a new epidemic in the United States. Yet there are no adequate data to guide treatment of the more typical and complex cases of patients who are very old and frail. Methods Using the SAGE database, we studied the cases of 86,094 patients with CHF admitted to any of the 1492 long-term care facilities of 5 states from 1992 through 1996. We described their clinical and functional characteristics and their pharmacologic treatment to verify agreement with widely approved guidelines. We evaluated age- and sex-related differences, and we determined predictors of receiving an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor by developing a multiple logistic regression model. Results The mean age of the population was 84.9 ± 8 years. Eighty percent of the patients 85 years of age or older were women. More than two thirds of patients underwent frequent hospitalizations related to CHF in the year preceding admission to a long-term care facility. Coronary heart disease and hypertension were the most common causes. Half of the patients received digoxin and 45% a diuretic, regardless of background cardiovascular comorbidities. Only 25% of patients had a prescription for ACE inhibitors. The presence of cardiovascular comorbidity, already being a recipient of a large number of medications, a previous hospitalization for CHF, and admission to the facility in recent years were associated with an increased likelihood of receiving an ACE inhibitor. The presence of severe physical limitation was inversely related to use of ACE inhibitors, as were a series of organizational factors related to the facilities. Conclusions Patients in long-term care who have CHF little resemble to those enrolled in randomized trials. This circumstance may explain, at least in part, the divergence from pharmacologic management consensus guidelines. Yet the prescription of ACE inhibitors varies significantly across facilities and depends on organizational characteristics. (Am Heart J 2000;139:85-93.)


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1999

Predictors of mortality in patients with Alzheimer’s disease living in nursing homes

Giovanni Gambassi; Francesco Landi; Kate L. Lapane; Antonio Sgadari; Vincent Mor; Roberto Bernabei

Background and aims: Community care for older people is increasing dramatically in most European countries as the preferred option to hospital andlong-term care. While there has been a rapid expansion in Evidence-Based Medicine, apart from studies of specific interventions such as home visiting and hospital at home (specialist visits or hospital services provided to people in their own homes in the community), there is little evidence of characteristics of the recipients of community care services or the organisation of services that produce the best outcomes for them and their informal carers. The AdHOC Study was designed to compare outcomes of different models of community care using a structured comparison of services and a comprehensive standardised assessment instrument across 11 European countries. This paper describes the study and baseline data. Methods: 4,500 people 65 years and older already receiving home care services within the urban areas selected in each country were randomly sampled. They were assessed with the MDS-HC (Minimum Data Set-Home Care) instrument, containing over 300 items, including socio-demographic, physical and cognitive characteristics of patients as well as medical diagnoses and medications received. These data were linked to information on the setting, services structures and services utilization, including use of hospital and long-term care. After baseline assessment, patients were re-evaluated at 6 months with an abbreviated version of the instrument, and then at the end of one year. Data collection was performed by specially-trained personnel. In this paper, socio-demographics, physical and cognitive function and provision of hours of formal care are compared between countries at baseline. Results: The final study sample comprised 3,785 patients; mean age was 82±7.2 years, 74.2% were females. Marital and living status reflected close family relationships in southern Europe relative to Nordic countries, where 5 times as many patients live alone. Recipients of community care in France and Italy are characterised by very high physical and cognitive impairment compared with those in northern Europe, who have comparatively little impairment in Activities of Daily Living and cognitive function. The provision of formal care to people with similar dependency varies extremely widely with very little formal care in Italy and more than double the average across all levels of dependency in the UK. Conclusions: The AdHOC study, by virtue of the use of a common comprehensive standardised assessment instrument, is a unique tool in examining older recipients of community care services in European countries and their widely varied organisation. The extreme differences seen in dependency and hours of care illustrate the probable contribution the study will make to developing an evidence based on the structure, quantity and targeting of community care, which will have major policy implications.

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Roberto Bernabei

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Francesco Landi

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Pierugo Carbonin

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Kate L. Lapane

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Antonio Sgadari

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Claudio Pedone

Università Campus Bio-Medico

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Rosa Liperoti

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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