D
Donatella Panatto
Researcher at University of Genoa
Publications - 151
Citations - 2850
Donatella Panatto is an academic researcher from University of Genoa. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vaccination & Population. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 133 publications receiving 2334 citations. Previous affiliations of Donatella Panatto include Health Science University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Effectiveness of MF59-adjuvanted seasonal influenza vaccine in the elderly: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Alexander Domnich,Lucia Arata,Daniela Amicizia,Joan Puig-Barberà,Roberto Gasparini,Donatella Panatto +5 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that MF59-TIV is effective in reducing several influenza- related outcomes among the elderly, especially hospitalizations due to influenza-related complications.
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Epidemiology of tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) in Europe and its prevention by available vaccines
Daniela Amicizia,Alexander Domnich,Donatella Panatto,Piero Luigi Lai,Maria Luisa Cristina,Ulderico Avio,Roberto Gasparini +6 more
TL;DR: The present paper attempted to describe the continuously changing epidemiology of TBE in European States and to overview clinical development of available vaccines paying particular attention on cross-protection elicited by the vaccines.
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Assessing Ebola-related web search behaviour: insights and implications from an analytical study of Google Trends-based query volumes
Cristiano Alicino,Nicola Luigi Bragazzi,V Faccio,Daniela Amicizia,Donatella Panatto,Roberto Gasparini,Giancarlo Icardi,Andrea Orsi +7 more
TL;DR: Google Trends showed a coarse-grained nature, strongly correlating with global epidemiological data, but was weaker at country level, as it was prone to distortions induced by unbalanced media coverage and the digital divide.
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Clinical and socioeconomic impact of seasonal and pandemic influenza in adults and the elderly
TL;DR: Estimating the influenza burden is a useful aid to determining the best influenza vaccination strategy and preventive and clinical treatments for influenza epidemics and pandemics.
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The “healthy immigrant” effect: does it exist in Europe today?
TL;DR: This paper evaluated the European scientific research into the existence of the “healthy immigrant” effect and suggested that recent immigrants are generally healthier than native-born populations in spite of the fact that they frequently have a lower socioeconomic status and less access to healthcare services.