Healthcare
I have worked as healthcare content editor and in scientific dissemination for more than ten years, curating books, articles, magazines, webinars, podcasts and social media campaigns. I feel at ease interacting with doctors and medical professionals and I created professional and personal bonds with many of them based on respect and esteem. I feel more and more responsible that their work and their passion receive the rightful attention and are conveyed by the best message possible. I benefited greatly from my three years of study in Medicine and Surgery; an experience that taught me the medical practice language and the basic knowledge of the biological and chemical processes, thus increasing my ability to interact with healthcare professionals.
Risk management
I develop content for Relyens, a leading European risk management provider in healthcare and a mutualistic insurer for hospitals. I curate an online magazine dedicated to the experiences of risk managers to share best practices at international level.
Opthalmology
I coordinate online content and the editorial board of the magazine Social Ophthalmology - Oftalmologia Sociale for the Italian association for the Prevention of blindness. I also provide content for IRCCS Fondazione G. B. Bietti, the first Research Institute in Italy dedicated to Ophthalmology.
My philosophy
Information, in all its different forms, is the most important concept in healthcare now. Precise, useful, reliable information can save lives. It catalyses progress. Information shared between healthcare professionals or between professionals and ‘machines’ can inform the right decisions, greatly improving safety and the respect of protocols. It can also offer healthcare governance the kind of evidence needed to predict future needs. Also, communication between doctors and patients is paramount: it helps diagnosis, helps the continuation of therapies, eases psychological pain and anxieties and, in doing so, accomplished the goal of empowering people, allowing them to be active actors in their healing and acknowledging their need as individual and not only as patients.