Religious Coping Is Differentially Associated with Physiological and Subjective Distress Indicators: Comparing Cortisol and Self-Report Patterns
This study examined the trajectory of subjective distress and cortisol patterns leading up to and following a stressful college exam using daily diary and ambulatory saliva samples, respectively (N students = 246). Religious coping was not significantly associated with subjective reports of distress. However, prior to the exam, greater use of religious coping was associated with an ostensibly more adaptive accelerated return to a cortisol baseline. This protective effect was no longer significant when the exam was over, suggesting that religious coping acts as a protective buffer against physiological stress responses rath...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - November 15, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Alison M Haney Sean P Lane Source Type: research

Religious Coping Is Differentially Associated with Physiological and Subjective Distress Indicators: Comparing Cortisol and Self-Report Patterns
This study examined the trajectory of subjective distress and cortisol patterns leading up to and following a stressful college exam using daily diary and ambulatory saliva samples, respectively (N students = 246). Religious coping was not significantly associated with subjective reports of distress. However, prior to the exam, greater use of religious coping was associated with an ostensibly more adaptive accelerated return to a cortisol baseline. This protective effect was no longer significant when the exam was over, suggesting that religious coping acts as a protective buffer against physiological stress responses rath...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - November 15, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Alison M Haney Sean P Lane Source Type: research

Religious Coping Is Differentially Associated with Physiological and Subjective Distress Indicators: Comparing Cortisol and Self-Report Patterns
This study examined the trajectory of subjective distress and cortisol patterns leading up to and following a stressful college exam using daily diary and ambulatory saliva samples, respectively (N students = 246). Religious coping was not significantly associated with subjective reports of distress. However, prior to the exam, greater use of religious coping was associated with an ostensibly more adaptive accelerated return to a cortisol baseline. This protective effect was no longer significant when the exam was over, suggesting that religious coping acts as a protective buffer against physiological stress responses rath...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - November 15, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Alison M Haney Sean P Lane Source Type: research

Religious Coping Is Differentially Associated with Physiological and Subjective Distress Indicators: Comparing Cortisol and Self-Report Patterns
This study examined the trajectory of subjective distress and cortisol patterns leading up to and following a stressful college exam using daily diary and ambulatory saliva samples, respectively (N students = 246). Religious coping was not significantly associated with subjective reports of distress. However, prior to the exam, greater use of religious coping was associated with an ostensibly more adaptive accelerated return to a cortisol baseline. This protective effect was no longer significant when the exam was over, suggesting that religious coping acts as a protective buffer against physiological stress responses rath...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - November 15, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Alison M Haney Sean P Lane Source Type: research

Religious Coping Is Differentially Associated with Physiological and Subjective Distress Indicators: Comparing Cortisol and Self-Report Patterns
This study examined the trajectory of subjective distress and cortisol patterns leading up to and following a stressful college exam using daily diary and ambulatory saliva samples, respectively (N students = 246). Religious coping was not significantly associated with subjective reports of distress. However, prior to the exam, greater use of religious coping was associated with an ostensibly more adaptive accelerated return to a cortisol baseline. This protective effect was no longer significant when the exam was over, suggesting that religious coping acts as a protective buffer against physiological stress responses rath...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - November 15, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Alison M Haney Sean P Lane Source Type: research

Religious Coping Is Differentially Associated with Physiological and Subjective Distress Indicators: Comparing Cortisol and Self-Report Patterns
This study examined the trajectory of subjective distress and cortisol patterns leading up to and following a stressful college exam using daily diary and ambulatory saliva samples, respectively (N students = 246). Religious coping was not significantly associated with subjective reports of distress. However, prior to the exam, greater use of religious coping was associated with an ostensibly more adaptive accelerated return to a cortisol baseline. This protective effect was no longer significant when the exam was over, suggesting that religious coping acts as a protective buffer against physiological stress responses rath...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - November 15, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Alison M Haney Sean P Lane Source Type: research

Religious Coping Is Differentially Associated with Physiological and Subjective Distress Indicators: Comparing Cortisol and Self-Report Patterns
This study examined the trajectory of subjective distress and cortisol patterns leading up to and following a stressful college exam using daily diary and ambulatory saliva samples, respectively (N students = 246). Religious coping was not significantly associated with subjective reports of distress. However, prior to the exam, greater use of religious coping was associated with an ostensibly more adaptive accelerated return to a cortisol baseline. This protective effect was no longer significant when the exam was over, suggesting that religious coping acts as a protective buffer against physiological stress responses rath...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - November 15, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Alison M Haney Sean P Lane Source Type: research

Religious Coping Is Differentially Associated with Physiological and Subjective Distress Indicators: Comparing Cortisol and Self-Report Patterns
This study examined the trajectory of subjective distress and cortisol patterns leading up to and following a stressful college exam using daily diary and ambulatory saliva samples, respectively (N students = 246). Religious coping was not significantly associated with subjective reports of distress. However, prior to the exam, greater use of religious coping was associated with an ostensibly more adaptive accelerated return to a cortisol baseline. This protective effect was no longer significant when the exam was over, suggesting that religious coping acts as a protective buffer against physiological stress responses rath...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - November 15, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Alison M Haney Sean P Lane Source Type: research

Religious Coping Is Differentially Associated with Physiological and Subjective Distress Indicators: Comparing Cortisol and Self-Report Patterns
This study examined the trajectory of subjective distress and cortisol patterns leading up to and following a stressful college exam using daily diary and ambulatory saliva samples, respectively (N students = 246). Religious coping was not significantly associated with subjective reports of distress. However, prior to the exam, greater use of religious coping was associated with an ostensibly more adaptive accelerated return to a cortisol baseline. This protective effect was no longer significant when the exam was over, suggesting that religious coping acts as a protective buffer against physiological stress responses rath...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - November 15, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Alison M Haney Sean P Lane Source Type: research

The Right Advice, from the Right Person, in the Right Way: Non-Engaged Consumer Families' Preferences for Lifestyle Intervention Design Relating to Severe Obesity in Childhood
Behav Med. 2023 Oct 16:1-14. doi: 10.1080/08964289.2023.2269288. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTFamily-based lifestyle interventions for children/adolescents with severe levels of obesity are numerous, but evidence indicates programs fail to elicit short- or longer-term weight loss outcomes. Families with lived experience can provide valuable insight as we strive to improve outcomes from programs. Our aim was to explore elements that families desired in a program designed to treat severe levels of obesity in young people. We recruited a cross-sectional sample of 13 families (parents and young people) who had been referred b...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - October 16, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Liz A Saunders James A Dimmock Ben Jackson Lisa Y Gibson Justine Doust Elizabeth A Davis Lyndsey Price Timothy Budden Source Type: research

The Right Advice, from the Right Person, in the Right Way: Non-Engaged Consumer Families' Preferences for Lifestyle Intervention Design Relating to Severe Obesity in Childhood
Behav Med. 2023 Oct 16:1-14. doi: 10.1080/08964289.2023.2269288. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTFamily-based lifestyle interventions for children/adolescents with severe levels of obesity are numerous, but evidence indicates programs fail to elicit short- or longer-term weight loss outcomes. Families with lived experience can provide valuable insight as we strive to improve outcomes from programs. Our aim was to explore elements that families desired in a program designed to treat severe levels of obesity in young people. We recruited a cross-sectional sample of 13 families (parents and young people) who had been referred b...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - October 16, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Liz A Saunders James A Dimmock Ben Jackson Lisa Y Gibson Justine Doust Elizabeth A Davis Lyndsey Price Timothy Budden Source Type: research

The Right Advice, from the Right Person, in the Right Way: Non-Engaged Consumer Families' Preferences for Lifestyle Intervention Design Relating to Severe Obesity in Childhood
Behav Med. 2023 Oct 16:1-14. doi: 10.1080/08964289.2023.2269288. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTFamily-based lifestyle interventions for children/adolescents with severe levels of obesity are numerous, but evidence indicates programs fail to elicit short- or longer-term weight loss outcomes. Families with lived experience can provide valuable insight as we strive to improve outcomes from programs. Our aim was to explore elements that families desired in a program designed to treat severe levels of obesity in young people. We recruited a cross-sectional sample of 13 families (parents and young people) who had been referred b...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - October 16, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Liz A Saunders James A Dimmock Ben Jackson Lisa Y Gibson Justine Doust Elizabeth A Davis Lyndsey Price Timothy Budden Source Type: research

The Right Advice, from the Right Person, in the Right Way: Non-Engaged Consumer Families' Preferences for Lifestyle Intervention Design Relating to Severe Obesity in Childhood
Behav Med. 2023 Oct 16:1-14. doi: 10.1080/08964289.2023.2269288. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTFamily-based lifestyle interventions for children/adolescents with severe levels of obesity are numerous, but evidence indicates programs fail to elicit short- or longer-term weight loss outcomes. Families with lived experience can provide valuable insight as we strive to improve outcomes from programs. Our aim was to explore elements that families desired in a program designed to treat severe levels of obesity in young people. We recruited a cross-sectional sample of 13 families (parents and young people) who had been referred b...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - October 16, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Liz A Saunders James A Dimmock Ben Jackson Lisa Y Gibson Justine Doust Elizabeth A Davis Lyndsey Price Timothy Budden Source Type: research

The Right Advice, from the Right Person, in the Right Way: Non-Engaged Consumer Families' Preferences for Lifestyle Intervention Design Relating to Severe Obesity in Childhood
Behav Med. 2023 Oct 16:1-14. doi: 10.1080/08964289.2023.2269288. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTFamily-based lifestyle interventions for children/adolescents with severe levels of obesity are numerous, but evidence indicates programs fail to elicit short- or longer-term weight loss outcomes. Families with lived experience can provide valuable insight as we strive to improve outcomes from programs. Our aim was to explore elements that families desired in a program designed to treat severe levels of obesity in young people. We recruited a cross-sectional sample of 13 families (parents and young people) who had been referred b...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - October 16, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Liz A Saunders James A Dimmock Ben Jackson Lisa Y Gibson Justine Doust Elizabeth A Davis Lyndsey Price Timothy Budden Source Type: research

The Right Advice, from the Right Person, in the Right Way: Non-Engaged Consumer Families' Preferences for Lifestyle Intervention Design Relating to Severe Obesity in Childhood
Behav Med. 2023 Oct 16:1-14. doi: 10.1080/08964289.2023.2269288. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTFamily-based lifestyle interventions for children/adolescents with severe levels of obesity are numerous, but evidence indicates programs fail to elicit short- or longer-term weight loss outcomes. Families with lived experience can provide valuable insight as we strive to improve outcomes from programs. Our aim was to explore elements that families desired in a program designed to treat severe levels of obesity in young people. We recruited a cross-sectional sample of 13 families (parents and young people) who had been referred b...
Source: Behavioral Medicine - October 16, 2023 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Liz A Saunders James A Dimmock Ben Jackson Lisa Y Gibson Justine Doust Elizabeth A Davis Lyndsey Price Timothy Budden Source Type: research