V
Valentino Pomini
Researcher at University of Lausanne
Publications - 53
Citations - 774
Valentino Pomini is an academic researcher from University of Lausanne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 48 publications receiving 712 citations. Previous affiliations of Valentino Pomini include University Hospital of Lausanne.
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The effect of cognitive behavioral treatment on the positive symptoms of schizophrenia spectrum disorders: A meta-analysis
TL;DR: Compared to other adjunctive measures, CBT showed significant reduction in positive symptoms and there was a higher benefit of CBT for patients suffering an acute psychotic episode versus the chronic condition.
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Cognitive behavioural therapy for weight gain associated with antipsychotic drugs
Yasser Khazaal,Emmanuelle Fresard,Sophie Rabia,Anne Chatton,Stéphane Rothen,Valentino Pomini,François Grasset,François Borgeat,Daniele Fabio Zullino +8 more
TL;DR: The proposed CBT treatment is particularly interesting for patients suffering from weight gain associated with antipsychotic treatment, and showed some improvement with respect to binge eating symptomatology and weight-related cognitions.
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The Beck Cognitive Insight Scale in outpatients with psychotic disorders: further evidence from a French-speaking sample.
TL;DR: The French translation of the BCIS appears to have acceptable psychometric proprieties and gives additional support to the scale, as well as cross-cultural validity for its use with outpatients suffering from schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorders.
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A card game for the treatment of delusional ideas: A naturalistic pilot trial
Yasser Khazaal,Jérôme Favrod,Joël Libbrecht,Sophie Claude Finot,Silke Azoulay,Laetitia Benzakin,Myriam Oury-Delamotte,Christian Follack,Valentino Pomini +8 more
TL;DR: This pilot study supports the feasibility and effectiveness of "Michael's game" in naturalistic setting and additional studies could validate the game in a controlled fashion.
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A First Step Toward Cognitive Remediation of Voices: a Case Study
TL;DR: A patient with paranoid schizophrenia and persistent thought insertions was trained for 6 hours to use mnemonic techniques to compensate specific deficits in source‐monitoring, and results show that the patient was able to improve his performance and maintain the acquired progress at a 1‐month follow‐up assessment.