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Claudio Sica

Researcher at University of Florence

Publications -  103
Citations -  5778

Claudio Sica is an academic researcher from University of Florence. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Psychopathy. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 99 publications receiving 5011 citations. Previous affiliations of Claudio Sica include Health Science University & Boston University.

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Coping Orientation to Problems Experienced-Nuova Versione Italiana (COPE-NVI): uno strumento per la misura degli stili di coping

TL;DR: The COPE-NVI as mentioned in this paper is a versione italiana of the COPE Orientation to the Problems Experienced (COPE) which is a misura sviluppata originariamente in the USA.
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Coping strategies : Evidence for cross-cultural differences ? A preliminary study with the Italian version of coping orientations to problems experienced (COPE)

TL;DR: The internal structure of the COPE inventory (Carver, Scheier & Weintraub, 1989), a questionnaire which measures 15 different coping strategies, was studied in the Italian version of COPE.
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The Italian version of the obsessive compulsive inventory: its psychometric properties on community and clinical samples

TL;DR: The OCI-R proved to be a reliable and valid measure of obsessive compulsive symptoms in the Italian context and was positively correlated with measures of depression, anxiety, and worry, although the correlations were weaker than those with the other measure of OCD symptoms.
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Predicting Burnout Among HIV/AIDS and Oncology Health Care Workers

TL;DR: The regression analysis suggested that the negative aspects of burnout were predicted primary by professional status, type of unit (oncology), depression and the use of the humor as a coping strategy, while personal accomplishment was better predicted by positive coping strategies and low level of anxiety.
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In search of specificity: "not just right experiences" and obsessive-compulsive symptoms in non-clinical and clinical Italian individuals.

TL;DR: Results showed that NJREs could be reliably measured through a self-report format in non-clinical and clinical Italian individuals and found a specific association between NJ REs severity and OCD symptoms was found in the non- clinical sample, after controlling for anxiety, depression, and perfectionism.