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- 1From: Journal of Behavioral Medicine. (Vol. 36, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis study assessed the combined effects of coping style and intra-procedural information on indices of distress (physiological measures, observed distress, self-report measures of anxiety and affect) among a group of...
- 2From: Journal of Behavioral Medicine. (Vol. 36, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedAlthough the use of prayer as a religious coping strategy is widespread and often claimed to have positive effects on physical disorders including pain, it has never been tested in a controlled experimental setting...
- 3From: Journal of Behavioral Medicine. (Vol. 36, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis study examined the role of congregational support as a mechanism by which religious involvement may slow the decline of functional ability during late life. Disability was tracked longitudinally over a 4-year...
- 4From: Journal of Behavioral Medicine. (Vol. 36, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedStress is a hypothesized pathway in socioeconomic status (SES)-physical health associations, but the available empirical data are inconsistent. In part, this may reflect discrepancies in the approach to measuring stress...
- 5From: Journal of Behavioral Medicine. (Vol. 36, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe objective of the current study was to examine whether a history of comorbid depression and anxiety predicted new onset of heart disease. Data from 6 surveys, spanning 15 years, of the Australian Longitudinal Study...
- 6From: Journal of Behavioral Medicine. (Vol. 36, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis study investigated the roles of mindfulness and acceptance on adjustment in couples coping with multiple sclerosis (MS) by examining the effects of an individual's mindfulness and acceptance on their own adjustment...
- 7From: Journal of Behavioral Medicine. (Vol. 36, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedA placebo by proxy effect occurs when a patient's response to therapy, assessed either objectively or subjectively, is affected by the behavior of other people who know that the patient is undergoing therapy. We...
- 8From: Journal of Behavioral Medicine. (Vol. 36, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedDistressed ('Type D') personality, the combination of negative affectivity (NA) and social inhibition (SI), has been associated with adverse health outcomes. The purpose of this study was to examine if an 8-week...
- 9From: Journal of Behavioral Medicine. (Vol. 36, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedTo investigate how acceptance of illness affects chronic pain in terms of attention towards pain and fearful thinking of pain. 62 participants (50 women) with chronic pain carried a palmtop computer for 2 weeks. Eight...
- 10From: Journal of Behavioral Medicine. (Vol. 36, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedPrenatal depression has been linked to adverse reproductive outcomes including preterm labor and delivery, and low birth weight. Social support also has been linked to birth outcomes, and may buffer infants from the...