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(Adnkronos) - In questo numero:

Sla, 3 pazienti su 4 con disfagìa. Con “Sapori. Legàmi. Autonomia” custodiscono sapori e gioia della tavola

Stettini di Fiss e Onia: 'tra giovani che snobbano il preservativo boom di malattie sessualmente trasmesse'

Fondazione Aiom presenta la campagna ‘Tumore del seno e qualità di vita’

A fine vacanza stress da rientro per 1 italiano su 3, i consigli per sentirsi rigenerati

Record di solidarietà per la “24 Ore del donatore” di Fidas Verona: per ricordare che il bisogno di sangue non si ferma mai

Al Campus Bio-Medico di Roma nuovo corso di laurea in Scienze infermieristiche e ostetriche

Lilly lancia la campagna ‘#SavingTime’, un inno all’importanza della ricerca sui tumori del sangue



E per concludere la prima punta della Serie “Tumore al seno e rientro al lavoro”, dal titolo: “Le attività delle associazioni dei pazienti per sostenere il ritorno al lavoro”

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00:00In this number, ZLA, 3 patients out of 4 with dysphagia, with flavors, bonds and autonomy,
00:17taste the flavors and joys of the table.
00:20Stettini of Fissa and Onia, among young people who snob the preservative, boom of sexually transmitted diseases.
00:28Fondazione IOM presents the campaign Tumore del Seno e Qualità di Vita.
00:33And again, at the end of the holiday, stress as a return for an Italian out of 3,
00:38the advice to feel regenerated.
00:41Solidarity record for the 24-hour donor of FIDAS Verona,
00:46to remember that the need for blood never stops.
00:50At the Biomedical Campus of Rome, new degree course in Internal Medicine and Osteology.
00:56Vili launches the campaign Hashtag Saving Time,
01:00an anthem to the importance of research on blood tumors.
01:04And to conclude, the first episode of the series Tumore al Seno e Rientro al Lavoro,
01:09from the title, the activities of the patients' associations to support the return to work.
01:15Tumore al Seno e Rientro al Lavoro
01:20The amyotrophic sclerosis also affects the taste,
01:23while Italian out of 4 patients are forced to deal with dysphagia,
01:27that is, the difficulty of swallowing, which for 66% of the interviewees often makes the meals very tiring,
01:33making the desire to eat in company pass,
01:35while for 53% it takes away the appetite, making you feel tired and low on energy.
01:41Finally, 69% of these patients report that this condition also affects their emotional state,
01:47generating pessimism and distrust.
01:49This is the picture that emerges from the investigation on Italian patients
01:52with the SLA carried out by IQVIA Italy, which, as Rossella Balsamo explains,
01:56medical apharist and regulator in Zambon, Italy and Switzerland,
01:59has highlighted the daily difficulties related to the limitation,
02:02in addition to the psychological and social impact of dysphagia.
02:05These data, emerged from the investigation we did,
02:09allowed us to put on the black and white what are the real difficulties
02:14that the patient with SLA and dysphagia faces.
02:18Thanks to the collaboration of Zambon Italia with Aisla,
02:21with SLA Food and with the NEMO clinical centers,
02:25which have always been on the side of the Italian SLA community,
02:28the selection of recipes, flavors, links and autonomy was born,
02:34whose goal is precisely to help people with SLA
02:37not to give up the pleasure of the flavors of the table,
02:41to benefit from conviviality and above all to feel autonomous in everyday life.
02:47The special menu, designed specifically for patients and car drivers,
02:50by Chef Christian Benvenuto, Roberto Carcangio and Roberto Valbuzzi,
02:54with the scientific supervision of the Milanese headquarters and NEMO clinical centers,
02:58is available on the SLA Food website.
03:01From the parmigiana with a modified consistency
03:03to the fresh combination between shrimp and melon,
03:05passing through the carrot cream and kefir sauce.
03:08The selection of three recipes aims to give back to the 6,000 Italian patients with SLA
03:12the joy of sharing a meal with their family,
03:15an aspect that, as David Raffanelli, president of SLA Food,
03:19and national advisor to Aisla,
03:21represents a fundamental aspect in the lives of these people.
03:24The value of food for a person with SLA is a very high value.
03:32As president of SLA Food,
03:36I immediately made myself available to try to understand
03:42how to continue on the path,
03:47especially in life,
03:50which a SLA patient has to face,
03:53a pleasant moment,
03:56such as eating.
04:01Because it is taken into account that
04:06eating is an almost instinctive moment,
04:13but it is not so.
04:15Eating, sitting at the table,
04:19participating,
04:21is a very important moment in our lives,
04:25to which we must always dedicate the right time,
04:30because it is a moment in which there is a deep sharing,
04:35there is a moment of conviviality,
04:40of exchange of emotions.
04:44And being able to do it,
04:47to normalize SLA,
04:49means continuing in our life process,
04:54which should not only be a survival,
04:59but it should be living life day by day.
05:04And why is this evidenced by chef Roberto Valbuzzi?
05:07The team play is very important.
05:09We have learned that every patient has his or her needs.
05:12So there is the team, the union that makes the force,
05:16as the fact of being able to communicate this beautiful project,
05:19which starts from a single person,
05:21but then it is completed by other professional figures.
05:25And here, in this case,
05:27the need and the will of us chefs
05:30to combine our knowledge with that of the experts,
05:34the doctors, the professors,
05:36to find the best way,
05:39I think it is essential,
05:41to find the most suitable recipes for patients
05:44who face these problems.
05:47There is not a single vision,
05:49but there is a collective vision.
05:51I think this is the secret ingredient.
05:54Among the young people who snob the condom,
05:56in Italy there is a boom of sexually transmitted diseases.
05:59To document it, the latest data coming from the CDC,
06:02the European Center for Prevention and Control of Diseases,
06:05tell us that throughout Europe,
06:07and particularly in our country,
06:09there has been a boom in sexually transmitted infections
06:11of gonorrhea, chlamydia and syphilis.
06:13In fact, in Italy,
06:15there has been a boom in the number of sexually transmitted infections
06:18of gonorrhea, chlamydia and syphilis.
06:21In Italy, there has been a boom in the number of sexually transmitted infections
06:23of gonorrhea, chlamydia and syphilis.
06:25To raise the alarm for World Sexual Welfare Day
06:27is Piero Stettini,
06:29psychotherapist and clinical sexologist of Savona,
06:31vice-president of FIS,
06:33the Italian Federation of Scientific Sexology,
06:35and a member of ONIA,
06:37the National Observer of Infancy and Adolescence.
06:39There has been, over the years,
06:41a continuous, progressive decline
06:45in the use of condoms
06:47by young people
06:49in relation to their sexual intercourse.
06:51We see it in the 15 years
06:53that since 2010,
06:552014, 2018
06:57and the last study, 2022,
06:59the use of condoms
07:01has fallen sharply.
07:03Before, there were more than 8, almost 9 out of 10
07:05who used it.
07:07Now, just over 6 young people
07:09out of 10
07:11use condoms.
07:13It is true that there has been
07:15a small increase
07:17in the use of pills,
07:19but in Italy, the 15 years
07:21of sexual intercourse
07:23do not reach 15%,
07:25while in most of Europe
07:27we are at 50-60%
07:29or more.
07:33We have also had
07:35a strong increase
07:37in the contraception of emergency
07:39and also
07:41in the use of co-intercept
07:43which is now the second
07:45contraceptive method in Italy
07:47and is used by almost 6
07:49teenagers out of 10.
07:51They are therefore exposed,
07:53strongly exposed,
07:55to sexually transmitted infections
07:57as well as to unwanted pregnancies.
07:59Unfortunately, a confirmation
08:01comes to us from the ECDC,
08:03which is the European Center for Prevention
08:05and Disease Control,
08:07which has observed in recent years
08:09an exponential growth
08:11of infections among young people,
08:13think that,
08:15for example,
08:17we are talking about gonorrhea,
08:19which in Europe in recent years
08:21has doubled,
08:23in Italy among young people
08:25it has quadrupled,
08:27chlamydia
08:29has more than doubled,
08:31even syphilis
08:33has increased and tripled
08:35in recent years.
08:37These data, for the vice-president of FIS,
08:39are very worrying,
08:41because young people do not use
08:43protective methods.
08:45Well, on the one hand,
08:47there is a sense of invulnerability,
08:49so much so that it cannot happen to me.
08:51We have also observed
08:53an increase in the consumption,
08:55use, abuse of alcohol
08:57and psychoactive substances
08:59among young people,
09:01which certainly do not favor
09:03the implementation of protective behaviors.
09:05Among other things,
09:07we consider that the genital tissue
09:09of young people,
09:11very young people,
09:13is more exposed to infections
09:15because it is still immature
09:17and therefore there is a greater permeability,
09:19a greater possibility
09:21that viruses and bacteria
09:23are transmitted.
09:25Therefore,
09:27we really have to
09:29act in the face of these data,
09:31we cannot stand still.
09:33Therefore, for each FIS,
09:35a broad and incisive action
09:37must be taken,
09:39starting with the introduction
09:41of extensive sexual education
09:43in the school curriculum,
09:45as requested by the European Union
09:47at the same time by the most important
09:49international agencies,
09:51such as the UNESCO.
09:59Breast cancer has always been
10:01a complex disease to deal with.
10:03The numbers in Italy speak
10:05of 800,000 people affected,
10:07playing a crucial role
10:09in prevention, but also during
10:11the treatment period,
10:13quality and lifestyles.
10:15In Italy, 48% of women affected
10:17by breast cancer judge
10:19their quality of life
10:21during and after therapy.
10:23The IOMA Foundation therefore
10:25presented in Milan a survey
10:27carried out with the contribution
10:29of Gilead on over 300 women
10:31affected by the disease
10:33to raise awareness
10:35among patients, families and caregivers.
10:37For us, Gilead has this mission
10:39to create a better world
10:41for everyone,
10:43and with this commitment
10:45we have on solid oncology,
10:47obviously, being
10:49at the side of all stakeholders,
10:51in particular the medical society,
10:53the scientific research society,
10:55the association of patients,
10:57the institution, but also the media,
10:59we can work to bring
11:01innovation to all patients who need it.
11:03I think this campaign
11:05is a sign of this, a sign of innovation,
11:07because it is the first time
11:09in this setting of
11:11metastatic breast cancer,
11:13but also of a partnership
11:15among all of us here today.
11:17I tell them that
11:19I am proud to be on the side of IOMA
11:21in this initiative.
11:23The fundamental role is assumed
11:25by the medical-patient communication,
11:27which must be characterized by empathy
11:29but not only.
11:31From the moment of the diagnosis
11:33to the entire course of the treatment,
11:35especially when the treatment
11:37can be heavy,
11:39because it may require
11:41significant therapeutic
11:43processes,
11:45the fact of having a doctor
11:47at your side,
11:49but also a psychologist,
11:51who accompanies you from the moment of the diagnosis
11:53onwards, is really part
11:55of the treatment.
11:57Last year we published
11:59a catalogue with five
12:01requests concerning
12:03women with metastatic breast cancer.
12:05The first is
12:07about having specific
12:09paths, having
12:11a psychologist, a good
12:13relationship with the doctor,
12:15nutrition and therefore
12:17the whole part of lifestyle,
12:19but not least
12:21to have an acceleration
12:23on new drugs.
12:25But how much do the side effects
12:27related to therapies impact
12:29the daily life of patients?
12:31Therapies guarantee a greater
12:33amount of life and today
12:35we also know how to be
12:37able to improve the quality of life
12:39because they better control
12:41the disease. However,
12:43side effects related to therapies
12:45accompany and impact
12:47the daily life of patients
12:49and we need
12:51ancillary care and support
12:53in order to
12:55improve the quality of life
12:57of patients
12:59together with the advantage
13:01in the amount of life obtained
13:03with new treatments. New drugs
13:05allow to improve
13:07the maximum amount of
13:09toxicities experienced in the past
13:11and today we need to
13:13focus more and more on
13:15support treatments and
13:17communication with patients
13:19to try to improve
13:21the quality of life of patients.
13:23In oncological patients it is necessary
13:25to do a screening and go to
13:27detect the sixth vital sign,
13:29that is, the psychological and
13:31emotional state of the patient.
13:33It becomes important for the
13:35oncologist to go to work
13:37but also on what
13:39the patient was before.
13:41Very often you hear that
13:43there is a need to return
13:45to a before.
13:47Actually, that before brought us
13:49to the disease. As a psycho-oncologist
13:51I also support
13:53the promotion
13:55of a change of self
13:57that allows me to
13:59face life, that allows my patient
14:01to face life in a
14:03different way compared to
14:05how he faced it before
14:07the disease.
14:13The return from holidays
14:15usually generates
14:17contrasting feelings.
14:19On the one hand there is the desire to
14:21find your daily routine,
14:23but on the other hand the idea
14:25to resume the usual activities
14:27and responsibilities can become
14:29a source of stress, not only
14:31psychophysical but also emotional.
14:33The stress of return is in fact
14:35a condition that can manifest
14:37with symptoms such as anxiety,
14:39irritability and fatigue,
14:41negatively influencing both
14:43personal and professional life.
14:45In collaboration with psychologist Stefania Cuperi
14:47we have developed 5 practical tips
14:49to help you find your balance and
14:51overcome this phase with serenity.
14:53The sudden transition from relaxation
14:55to everyday life, added to the
14:57work and personal responsibilities,
14:59can in fact generate feelings of anxiety,
15:01sadness, irritability, fatigue and tension
15:03that can therefore define
15:05an anxious-depressive picture.
15:07Stress because for the return
15:09from holidays, for the return to
15:11daily life, it is somehow
15:13the stumbling block of always,
15:15which also concerns
15:17a sphere in which
15:19the person is called to
15:21rebalance in some way
15:23their private life and
15:25work life. In Italy,
15:2735% of the population
15:29somehow reports this
15:31stress syndrome from the return
15:33to holidays and
15:35the share of the population
15:37who suffers most from this stress
15:39is between 25 and 45 years old.
15:41More specifically, Stefania Cuperi
15:43proposes a clear guide to face
15:45with awareness the return to school
15:47or office, turning this moment
15:49into an opportunity to improve
15:51one's well-being and personal balance.
15:53She also offers suggestions on how
15:55companies can support their employees
15:57through programs of advanced
15:59and mental health-oriented
16:01business welfare programs.
16:03A first behavior that is somehow
16:05under your responsibility is to
16:07grant you a period of adaptation,
16:09a period that can vary from 3 to 4 days
16:11in which I go back home,
16:13resume old habits,
16:15I can also clean the house,
16:17fix my entire
16:19home environment, my context,
16:21reorganize myself in some way
16:23without going back
16:25and going to work the next day
16:27and be immersed in the many
16:29tasks that await me.
16:31During this period, it is also possible
16:33to resume in some way
16:35and maintain the healthy habits
16:37that we created on vacation.
16:39If, for example, we have the habit
16:41to read a book, to take a walk
16:43at a certain time of the day,
16:45it is also good here to resume
16:47these habits and insert them
16:49in your daily context.
16:51In addition to this,
16:53another important behavior
16:55could be to maintain
16:57the relationships we established
16:59during the vacation,
17:01so as not to face this return
17:03alone, but in company,
17:05or resume those relationships
17:07that we had put on stand-by
17:09just because we went on vacation.
17:11Other two important points
17:13are about the points that
17:15should accompany
17:17our everyday life forever,
17:19that is, taking care of yourself
17:21and also accepting
17:23that there are also emotions
17:25in which we are not
17:27so comfortable, such as
17:29the sadness of coming back,
17:31or that melancholy,
17:33but also that we have to
17:35find our resources,
17:37as we have always done,
17:39in reentering, in resuming
17:41our habits.
17:43In this it is also important
17:45that the employer
17:47or the companies
17:49you work for
17:51also give importance
17:53to this re-entry syndrome
17:55and therefore take care
17:57of their employees.
17:59The goal is to make
18:01both mental and physical health.
18:13It ended with a new record,
18:15the 16th edition
18:17of the 24 Hours of the Donor,
18:19a swimming relay organized by
18:21the donors of FIDAS Verona in
18:23collaboration with FIDAS Nazionale.
18:25It is now a cult event
18:27of the summer, of all Italian donors,
18:29why is this event important
18:31and why is it important to donate?
18:33To remind everyone that donation
18:35is essential, especially in the summer,
18:37in a period where there is
18:39a difficulty with regard
18:41to blood donations.
18:43So let's have fun and let's check,
18:45let's take care of our health
18:47and let's donate blood.
18:49Thanks to all the FIDAS donors in Italy.
18:51There were 355 donors
18:53from all over Italy who, for 24 hours,
18:55took a dip every 15 minutes
18:57in the Verona province,
18:59to remember the importance
19:01of blood and plasma donation.
19:03The participants of this edition
19:05completed 3,425 vats
19:07with a total of 171 km traveled.
19:09We had a lot of participants
19:11from all over Italy
19:13and a lot of volunteers
19:15who collaborated for the success
19:17of this great event.
19:19It is important to always remember
19:21that as swimmers dive
19:23into the vats of Olympionica
19:25there is a need for blood.
19:27Many were also awarded
19:29of this 16th edition.
19:31The FIDAS Verona trophy
19:33went to Gaia Negrini
19:35who made 21 vats in 15 minutes.
19:37Acknowledgments also for Giulia Fiorin,
19:39winner of the women's absolute trophy
19:41with 19 vats, and to Giacomo Gatti,
19:43the men's absolute record
19:45with his 21 vats traveled.
19:47The Carletto Lanciai trophy,
19:49signed by the volunteers
19:51who make the event possible,
19:53and especially in the night.
19:55The FIDAS national trophy
19:57was given by the FIDAS counselor
19:59Luisa Segato to the young group
20:01of FIDAS Verona
20:03for their great commitment
20:05to the collaboration of the event
20:07and for the ability to involve
20:09many young people
20:11from all over Italy,
20:13from Calabria to Valle d'Aosta.
20:15Many athletes who in the last
20:17weekend of August
20:19had to be at the side
20:21of FIDAS Verona
20:23like Alessandro Bori,
20:25Giorgia Malandrucco
20:27and Enrico Visconti
20:29of Club Sportmaster 100.
20:31Also this year I am here in Verona
20:33and I participated in the 24 hours
20:35of the Donator.
20:37I wanted to invite everyone to donate
20:39who is over 18,
20:41who weighs more than 50 kg
20:43and who is in good health.
20:45I really invite everyone to make this gesture
20:47and to contact the FIDAS of Verona.
20:49It is a very important gesture
20:51to participate in the marathon
20:53but even more to become donors
20:55as the FIDAS volunteer Luca Guarnieri says.
20:57I just swam for 15 minutes,
20:59the time it takes
21:01to make a blood donation.
21:03It's 15 minutes from your time
21:05that could save a life.
21:09In Italy, in 2033
21:11165,000 nurses
21:13will be missing.
21:15An alarming figure
21:17that requires reflection
21:19and concrete answers.
21:21The first comes from the
21:23Università Campus Biomedico di Roma
21:25which on the occasion of the symposium
21:27entitled Excellence and Innovation
21:29in Nursing Training
21:31launched the new master's degree
21:33in nursing and obstetrical sciences.
21:35The event brought together
21:37exponents of the institutions,
21:39the health profession and the university
21:41to discuss the future
21:43of nursing training in Italy
21:45in a context that sees the national health system
21:47increasingly in trouble
21:49due to the lack of qualified staff.
21:51Among the main themes
21:53is the need to diversify
21:55the careers of nurses
21:57with clinical specialization courses.
21:59An interdisciplinary approach
22:01that favors a more integrated
22:03and specialized training
22:05It's a course
22:07that will somehow
22:09establish a climate,
22:11create a climate of collaboration
22:13between students
22:15to be able to play
22:17these interprofessional skills
22:19alongside patients and families.
22:21It's a degree course
22:23that pays a lot of attention
22:25to a strong integration
22:27of scientific and
22:29humanistic knowledge
22:31because the assistance
22:33has this purpose
22:35of developing interventions
22:37for humans
22:39and therefore suitable
22:41for any type of need, of care.
22:43The synergistic action
22:45with the Ministry of Health
22:47and the Ministry of University
22:49provides, after the three-year degree,
22:51the possibility to continue
22:53with three master's degrees
22:55in clinical specialization
22:57to build new competences
22:59in the territorial field
23:01and pediatric neonatal.
23:03The training reform aims
23:05to give nurses an increasingly
23:07central role in patient management,
23:09both elderly and chronically,
23:11then placing them economically
23:13and legally in a different way.
23:15The epidemiological transition
23:17will culminate
23:19in about twenty years.
23:21Thanks to the PNRR
23:23we are also putting
23:25solutions into practice
23:27because community hospitals
23:29and the nurses
23:31of families and communities
23:33will represent that dimension
23:35of the last mile
23:37that will be able to guarantee
23:39the health response
23:41directly at the patient's home
23:43avoiding that there is
23:45an inappropriate
23:47recourse to the hospital.
23:49The day highlighted
23:51the importance of the collaboration
23:53between universities, health and institutions
23:55to innovate an essential profession
23:57creating new horizons
23:59for future generations of nurses
24:01and facing the challenge
24:03of the lack of staff
24:05of the National Health Service.
24:09Classical music
24:11as a metaphor for scientific research.
24:13On these notes,
24:15Lilly launches the campaign
24:17Saving Time,
24:19thanks to the research
24:21on blood tumors,
24:23which in the month dedicated
24:25to the first lights
24:27of dawn.
24:29A symbol of change
24:31in the fight against
24:33hematological neoplasia.
24:35Three concepts open to the public.
24:37One in Rome on September 14th,
24:39one in Naples on the 21st
24:41and one in Milan on the 28th.
24:43Blood tumors represent
24:4510% of all tumors.
24:47In Italy alone,
24:49more than half a million people
24:51live with it.
24:5380% of patients
24:55with hematological diseases
24:57are alive at 10 years old.
24:59Unfortunately,
25:01there are no preventive factors
25:03for hematological diseases
25:05so diagnosis
25:07in many cases
25:09can not be an early diagnosis
25:11but a rather late diagnosis.
25:13However,
25:15we have certainly interesting results
25:17especially in recent years
25:19that are better revolutionizing
25:21the approach of patients
25:23obtaining long-term
25:25and healing prospects.
25:27Thanks to scientific research,
25:29medicine has made significant
25:31progress in the treatment
25:33of hematological neoplasia.
25:35We have gradually moved
25:37from chemotherapy to biological therapies.
25:39Very often therapies
25:41that can be taken by mouth
25:43and therefore do not even need
25:45an infusion
25:47or a needle in the vein.
25:49These are drugs
25:51that are much better tolerated
25:53because they are more specific
25:55on certain specific mechanisms
25:57of the disease
25:59so they give less
26:01systemic effects,
26:03generalized effects
26:05of the side effects
26:07that we knew in chemotherapy.
26:09The Saving Time campaign
26:11marks Lilli's entry
26:13into hematology,
26:15a strong signal
26:17In the last 10 years
26:19we have seen that research
26:21has given new possibilities
26:23for patients.
26:25We have seen a rate of survival
26:27that is higher
26:29and also of care.
26:31But at the level of awareness
26:33and knowledge from the public
26:35we have work to do.
26:37For this reason
26:39we are trying to launch
26:41this campaign
26:43to take classical music
26:45that is always hidden
26:47in theaters
26:49in concerts
26:51out of these places
26:53to the public
26:55just as the research
26:57that we do
26:59is always hidden
27:01in our laboratories.
27:03We also want to take it
27:05and give the public
27:07an idea of ​​the challenges
27:09that patients with blood tumors
27:11have every day.
27:15The Saving Time campaign
27:17is a collaborative effort
27:19between the National Cancer Institute
27:21and the National Cancer Institute
27:23of Italy.
27:27Can I continue to work?
27:29This is one of the very first
27:31questions that a woman asks
27:33when a metastatic breast cancer
27:35is diagnosed.
27:37The Association of Social Promotion
27:39Europa Donna
27:41puts into practice activities
27:43to help women
27:45affected by the disease
27:47return to work.
27:49Today, more and more often
27:51unfortunately,
27:53breast cancer is a pathology
27:55that affects women
27:57at an increasingly young age
27:59and therefore at an age
28:01presumably working
28:03for the woman.
28:05So from here,
28:07what did we think?
28:09We have contacted
28:11about 190 women
28:13on the territory
28:15and we went to hear
28:17their feelings
28:19about the world of work.
28:21We have seen that
28:23there are big difficulties.
28:25Why?
28:27For example,
28:29the behavior is two years old.
28:31If a young metastatic patient
28:33can work,
28:35there is a need
28:37to be protected
28:39and this is a big problem.
28:41The difficulties on the road
28:43to return to work are many.
28:45Europa Donna provides
28:47a free consultation
28:49of a gyus laborer
28:51and some useful tools
28:53on their website.
28:55We have put in place
28:57two things
28:59quite simple.
29:01One that is still in progress
29:03through our website
29:05going to the section
29:07of information.
29:09The patient can
29:11enter their name
29:13and after a first consultation
29:15they are placed
29:17in a class
29:19or in more classes
29:21because there are classes of 20 people
29:23where this person
29:25according to what they want
29:27to do in their professional life
29:29is helped
29:31to write
29:33their new curriculum
29:35because maybe
29:37they had a break.
29:39A digital update service
29:41is offered
29:43through IBM platforms.
29:45A consultation
29:47with the psychologist
29:49is made to understand
29:51the goal
29:53for the future.
29:55And in the last analysis
29:57there is the possibility
29:59to have a meeting
30:01between the company's question
30:03and the person who can enter
30:05the world of work.
30:07To learn more
30:09the website
30:11etempodivita.it is available
30:13a project promoted by Novartis
30:15to support all women
30:17with advanced breast cancer.
30:19This was our last news
30:21to contact us
30:23you can write to
30:25health and chat
30:27at dncronos.com
30:29Thank you for following us
30:31Thank you for watching
30:33Thank you for watching
30:35Thank you for watching
30:37Thank you for watching
30:39Thank you for watching
30:41Thank you for watching
30:43Thank you for watching

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