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Francesco Petracca

Researcher at Bocconi University

Publications -  10
Citations -  164

Francesco Petracca is an academic researcher from Bocconi University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & mHealth. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 10 publications receiving 67 citations.

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The impact of food reformulation on nutrient intakes and health, a systematic review of modelling studies

TL;DR: Reformulation models highlight relevant improvements in diets and population health and the use of validated models and extensive scenario analyses would improve models’ credibility, providing useful insights for policy-makers.
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Harnessing Digital Health Technologies During and After the COVID-19 Pandemic: Context Matters.

TL;DR: An in-depth analysis of the organizational context is instrumental in fully interpreting the contribution of digital health during the pandemic and providing the foundation for the digital reconstruction of what is to come after.
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Distinguishing features in the assessment of mHealth apps.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identified the reasons that distinguish mHealth apps compared to medical devices at large and that should differentially feature their assessment, and adopted comprehensive evaluation processes that adequately consider the specific features of mHealth applications.
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Lung Cancer App (LuCApp) study protocol: a randomised controlled trial to evaluate a mobile supportive care app for patients with metastatic lung cancer

TL;DR: This trial makes a timely contribution to test a mobile application designed to improve the quality of life and delivery of care for patients with lung cancer, and evaluates the usability, effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of LuCApp versus standard of care.
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Mobile health divide between clinicians and patients in cancer care: Results from a cross-sectional international survey

TL;DR: There is a gap between basic and advanced users, with a prevalent use for activities related to the automation of processes and the interaction with other individuals and a limited adoption for side-effect management and compliance monitoring in both groups.