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Featured researches published by Panella M.


BMC Medicine | 2009

Effects of clinical pathways in the joint replacement: a meta-analysis

Antonietta Barbieri; Kris Vanhaecht; P Van Herck; Walter Sermeus; Fabrizio Faggiano; Sara Marchisio; Panella M

BackgroundA meta-analysis was performed to evaluate the use of clinical pathways for hip and knee joint replacements when compared with standard medical care. The impact of clinical pathways was evaluated assessing the major outcomes of in-hospital hip and knee joint replacement processes: postoperative complications, number of patients discharged at home, length of in-hospital stay and direct costs.MethodsMedline, Cinahl, Embase and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials were searched. The search was performed from 1975 to 2007. Each study was assessed independently by two reviewers. The assessment of methodological quality of the included studies was based on the Jadad methodological approach and on the New Castle Ottawa Scale. Data analysis abided by the guidelines set out by The Cochrane Collaboration regarding statistical methods. Meta-analyses were performed using RevMan software, version 4.2.ResultsTwenty-two studies met the study inclusion criteria and were included in the meta-analysis for a total sample of 6,316 patients. The aggregate overall results showed significantly fewer patients suffering postoperative complications in the clinical pathways group when compared with the standard care group. A shorter length of stay in the clinical pathway group was also observed and lower costs during hospital stay were associated with the use of the clinical pathways. No significant differences were found in the rates of discharge to home.ConclusionThe results of this meta-analysis show that clinical pathways can significantly improve the quality of care even if it is not possible to conclude that the implementation of clinical pathways is a cost-effective process, because none of the included studies analysed the cost of the development and implementation of the pathways. Based on the results we assume that pathways have impact on the organisation of care if the care process is structured in a standardised way, teams critically analyse the actual organisation of the process and the multidisciplinary team is highly involved in the re-organisation. Further studies should focus on the evaluation of pathways as complex interventions to help to understand which mechanisms within the clinical pathways can really improve the quality of care. With the need for knee and hip joint replacement on the rise, the use of clinical pathways might contribute to better quality of care and cost-effectiveness.


Quality & Safety in Health Care | 2009

Reduced in-hospital mortality for heart failure with clinical pathways: the results of a cluster randomised controlled trial

Panella M; Sara Marchisio; Ml Demarchi; Lamberto Manzoli; F. Di Stanislao

Background: Hospital treatment of heart failure (HF) frequently does not follow published guidelines, potentially contributing to HF high morbidity, mortality and economic cost. The Experimental Prospective Study on the Effectiveness and Efficiency of the Implementation of Clinical Pathways was undertaken to determine how clinical pathways (CP) for hospital treatment of HF affected care variability, guidelines adherence, in-hospital mortality and outcomes at discharge. Methods/design: Two-arm, cluster-randomised trial. Fourteen community hospitals were randomised either to the experimental arm (CP: appropriate therapeutic guidelines use, new organisation and procedures, patient education) or to the control arm (usual care). The main outcome was in-hospital mortality; secondary outcomes were length and appropriateness of the stay, rate of unscheduled readmissions, customer satisfaction, usage of diagnostic and therapeutic procedures during hospital stay and quality indicators at discharge. All outcomes were measured using validated instruments available in literature. Results: In-hospital mortality was 5.6% in the experimental arm (n = 12); 15.4% in controls (n = 33, p = 0.001). In CP and usual care groups, the mean rates of unscheduled readmissions were 7.9% and 13.9%, respectively. Adjusting for age, smoking, New York Heart Association score, hypertension and source of referral, patients in the CP group, as compared to controls, had a significantly lower risk of in-hospital death (OR 0.18; 95% CI 0.07 to 0.46) and unscheduled readmissions (OR 0.42; 95% CI 0.20 to 0.87). No differences were found between CP and control with respect to the appropriateness of the stay, costs and patient’s satisfaction. Except for electrocardiography, all recommended diagnostic procedures were used more in the CP group. Similarly, pharmaceuticals use was significantly greater in CP, with the exception of diuretics and anti-platelets agents. Discussion: The introduction of a specifically tailored CP for the hospital treatment of HF was effective in reducing in-hospital mortality and unscheduled readmissions. This study adds to previous knowledge indicating that CP should be used to improve the quality of hospital treatment of HF. Trial registration number: NCT00519038


International Journal of Nursing Studies | 2011

Impact of care pathways for in-hospital management of COPD exacerbation: A systematic review

Cathy Lodewijckx; Walter Sermeus; Panella M; Svin Deneckere; Fabrizio Leigheb; Marc Decramer; Kris Vanhaecht

BACKGROUND In-hospital management of COPD exacerbation is suboptimal, and outcomes are poor. Care pathways are a possible strategy for optimizing care processes and outcomes. OBJECTIVES The aim of the literature review was to explore characteristics of existing care pathways for in-hospital management of COPD exacerbations and to address their impact on performance of care processes, clinical outcomes, and team functioning. METHODS A literature search was conducted for articles published between 1990 and 2010 in the electronic databases of Medline, CINAHL, EMBASE, and Cochrane Library. Main inclusion criteria were (I) patients hospitalized for a COPD exacerbation; (II) implementation and evaluation of a care pathway; (III) report of original research, including experimental and quasi experimental designs, variance analysis, and interviews of professionals and patients about their perception on pathway effectiveness. RESULTS Four studies with a quasi experimental design were included. Three studies used a pre-post test design; the fourth study was a non randomized controlled trial comparing an experimental group where patients were treated according to a care pathway with a control group where usual care was provided. The four studied care pathways were multidisciplinary structured care plans, outlining time-specific clinical interventions and responsibilities by discipline. Statistic analyses were rarely performed, and the trials used very divergent indicators to evaluate the impact of the care pathways. The studies described positive effects on blood sampling, daily weight measurement, arterial blood gas measurement, referral to rehabilitation, feelings of anxiety, length of stay, readmission, and in-hospital mortality. CONCLUSIONS Research on COPD care pathways is very limited. The studies described few positive effects of the care pathways on diagnostic processes and on clinical outcomes. Though due to limited statistical analysis and weak design of the studies, the internal validity of results is limited. Therefore, based on these studies the impact of care pathways on COPD exacerbation is inconclusive. These findings indicate the need for properly designed research like a cluster randomized controlled trial to evaluate the impact of COPD care pathways on performance of care processes, clinical outcomes, and teamwork.


International Journal of Care Pathways | 2011

The 3-blackboard method as consensus-development exercise for building care pathways

Kris Vanhaecht; R Van Zelm; E Van Gerven; Walter Sermeus; K Bower; Panella M; Svin Deneckere

The development and implementation of a care pathway is a complex intervention. One of the goals is to standardize the interprofessional teamwork. During the development of the care pathway, the team can use the 3-blackboard method to systematically define the goals, describe the organization of the care process and develop a list of topics for further analysis. The 3-blackboard method is a consensus development exercise which can be used for pathway projects but also during other quality and patient safety improvement exercises.


Revista De Calidad Asistencial | 2016

Becoming a "second victim" in health care: Pathway of recovery after adverse event.

Carmela Rinaldi; Fabrizio Leigheb; Kris Vanhaecht; Chiara Donnarumma; Panella M

INTRODUCTION The healthcare worker involved in an unanticipated adverse patient event can become second victim. These workers suffer physically and psycho-socially and try to overcome the post-event emotional stress by obtaining emotional support in a variety of ways. The goal of this research was to study second victims among health care providers in Italy. METHODS This contribution contains the results of 33 interviews of nurses, physicians and other healthcare workers. After institutional approval, the semi-structured interview, composed of 25 questions, was translated from English into Italian. The audio-interviews were transcribed on paper verbatim by the interviewer. It was then verified if the interviewees experienced the six post-event stages of second victim recovery previously described within the literature. RESULTS The interviewees described the post-event recovery stages described by literature but stages were not detailed in the exact succession order as the American study. All participants clearly remembered the adverse event and referred the physical and psycho-social symptoms. The psychological support obtained by second victims was described as poor and inefficient. DISCUSSION The post-event recovery pathway is predictable but not always clearly respected as defined within this Italian sample. Future study of the second-victim phenomenon and desired supportive interventions is necessary to understand the experience and interventions to mitigate harm of future clinicians. Every day healthcare workers become second victims and, considering that human resources are the most important heritage of healthcare infrastructures, after an adverse event it is very important to execute valid interventional programs to support and train these workers.


Annali di igiene : medicina preventiva e di comunità | 2015

Exploration study on mortality trends in the territory surrounding an incineration plant of urban solid waste in the municipality of Vercelli (Piedmont, Italy) 1988-2009

Salerno C; P. Marciani; E. Barasolo; P.G. Fossale; Panella M; Palin L

BACKGROUND The places, where the incinerators are located, often present problems of heterogeneous people having different environmental factors. It becomes important to evaluate the possible etiologic role of various environmental risk factors and try to quantify as they affect in the excess epidemiological. METHODS This study considers the ISTAT index mortality due to all causes occurred from 1988 to 2009 referred to ten municipalities at south of Vercelli (Piedmont, North Western Italy) placed nearby the active incinerator from 1977 (10 latent years). The risks were calculated considering this area at risk versus the municipalities placed at North of Vercelli and versus the Vercelli. RESULTS Some significant statically excesses emerged in the South area such as neoplasia of nervous system, liver and total of tumours. CONCLUSIONS The study presents some drawbacks, but it is a work creditable of widening by specific research ad hoc such as cohort and/or control where it is possible to verify various environmental, occupational and occasional factors.


International Journal for Quality in Health Care | 2003

Reducing clinical variations with clinical pathways: do pathways work?

Panella M; Sara Marchisio; F. Di Stanislao


Pathologica | 2000

[Autopsy today: an obsolete practice or an instrument for improving the quality of health care?].

Panella M; Kozel D; Sara Marchisio; Sarasino D; Pavanello Pp; Jussich G; Di Stanislao F


Annali di igiene : medicina preventiva e di comunità | 2014

Cancer risk among farmers in the Province of Vercelli (Italy) from 2002 to 2005: an ecological study.

Salerno C; Sara Sacco; Panella M; Paola Berchialla; Kris Vanhaecht; Palin L


Epidemiology | 2000

The role of atmospheric nitrogen dioxide in the risk of hospital admission in the patient with respiratory pathology.

Panella M; Palin La; Binotti M; Tommasini; Di Stanislao F

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Kris Vanhaecht

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Palin L

University of Eastern Piedmont

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Salerno C

University of Eastern Piedmont

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Sara Marchisio

University of Eastern Piedmont

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Lamberto Manzoli

University of Chieti-Pescara

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Svin Deneckere

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Kris Vanhaecht

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Fabrizio Leigheb

University of Eastern Piedmont

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Cathy Lodewijckx

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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