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Dive into the research topics where Anita Fernander is active.

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Featured researches published by Anita Fernander.


International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology | 2005

Exploring the Type-of-Crime Hypothesis, Religiosity, and Spirituality in an Adult Male Prison Population

Anita Fernander; John F. Wilson; Michele Staton; Carl G. Leukefeld

This study examined the association between measures of spirituality and religiosity and characteristics of current criminal conviction in a male prison population. Spirituality was operationalized as spiritual well-being and existential well-being. Religiosity was operationalized as frequency of religious service attendance, whether an individual considered himself to be religious, and how strongly an individual believed his religious beliefs influenced his behavior. Inmates whose convictions were property related reported greater spiritual wellbeing, were more likely to consider themselves religious, and to say that religious beliefs influenced their behavior than inmates whose crimes were not property related. Inmates whose convictions were drug related were less likely to consider themselves religious, and inmates whose conviction involved violence were more likely to consider themselves religious but less likely to endorse statements that religious beliefs influenced their behavior. The distinction between religiosity and spirituality is discussed in terms of the type-of-crime hypothesis.


International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology | 2004

An Exploratory Examination of the Spiritual Well-Being Scale among Incarcerated Black and White Male Drug Users

Anita Fernander; John F. Wilson; Michele Staton; Carl G. Leukefeld

A number of studies have examined the link between criminality and religiosity. However, only a limited number of studies have examined the relationship between spirituality and criminality. Because spirituality has been identified as a fundamental attribute of the personalities of Blacks, studies examining differences in the association between spirituality by ethnicity could provide information to understand the disparity of incarceration rates among Blacks and Whites. For this study, data were collected from 661 male prisoners with prior histories of drug use to examine spirituality that was assessed using two factors from a modified version of the Spiritual Well-Being Scale: relationship with a higher power and satisfaction with oneself in the world. Analyses revealed that White men reported significantly higher scores on both factors than Black men. The unexpected findings are discussed in light of the existing literature that identifies the significance of spirituality in the personality and coping style of Blacks.


Addiction | 2010

Are age of smoking initiation and purchasing patterns associated with menthol smoking

Anita Fernander; Mary Kay Rayens; Mei Zhang; Sarah Adkins

AIMS The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between age of cigarette smoking initiation and cigarette purchasing patterns on menthol smoking among current smokers. DESIGN Secondary analyses were conducted using logistic regression with balanced replicated weights. SETTING Data from the 2003 and 2006/07 Tobacco Use Supplement (TUS) to the Current Population Survey (CPS), collected by the National Cancer Institute, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Census Bureau, formed the basis for this investigation. PARTICIPANTS A total of 66,145 current smokers who participated in the TUS CPS administration in 2003 and 2006/07 were examined. MEASUREMENTS Demographic characteristics (gender, race/ethnicity, age, education and income), smoking frequency, purchase type (pack, carton, or both), age of initiation and menthol cigarette use were assessed. FINDINGS One-quarter of the sample smoked menthol cigarettes; most purchased their cigarettes by the pack when rather than by the carton; average age of cigarette smoking initiation was 18 years; and females, ethnic/racial minorities and younger participants were more likely to smoke menthol cigarettes compared with males, whites or older respondents. Other demographic factors associated with menthol cigarette use among current smokers included a high school education (the prevalence of menthol use among this cohort was greater than either those with less education or those with more). The multivariate logistic model only marginally revealed that age of smoking initiation predicted menthol smoking: findings are suggestive that the longer the delay of initiation the more likely that an individual smoked menthol cigarettes [odds ratio (OR) = 1.01; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.00-1.01]. In addition, relative to those who purchased cigarettes by the pack, smokers who purchased cigarettes by the carton were less (OR = 0.86; 95% CI: 0.81-0.91) likely to be menthol smokers. CONCLUSIONS Menthol smokers in the United States are more likely to be female, younger, from ethnic minority groups, and to have a high school education. The findings that menthol smokers in the U.S. tend to start smoking later than smokers of other types of cigarettes are suggestive only and require further study.


Ethnicity & Health | 2003

Assessing the reliability and validity of the John Henry Active Coping Scale in an urban sample of African Americans and white Americans.

Anita Fernander; Ron E. Durán; Patrice G. Saab; Maria M. Llabre; Neil Schneiderman

Objectives. The primary focus of this study was to examine the psychometric properties of the John Henry Active Coping scale (JHAC12) among an urban middle-aged sample of African Americans and white Americans. Design. The sample consisted of 75 African Americans and 129 white Americans from South Florida ranging in age from 25 to 54 years. Subjects completed the JHAC12, the Life Orientation Test (LOT), Coping Orientation to Problems Encountered (COPE) subscales, and the Marlowe-Crowne Social Desirability scale. Results. Major findings supported the validity and reliability of the JHAC12 among both African Americans and white Americans. For both the African American and white American subsamples, the JHAC12 was correlated with the active coping and suppression of competing activities subscales of the COPE and negatively correlated with the Marlowe-Crowne Social Desirability scale. In the African American subsample the JHAC12 was positively correlated with the LOT. The JHAC12 was also negatively associated with the behavioral disengagement subscale of the COPE among white Americans. Multiple regression analyses revealed that the proportion of variance in the JHAC12 explained by the various subscales of the COPE, Marlowe-Crowne, and the LOT was 43% for African Americans and 20% for white Americans. Factor analyses suggested two similar and meaningful factors among the African American and white American subsamples. Finally, Cronbach alpha reliabilities revealed similar subsample coefficients. Discussion. The implications of the findings are discussed in terms of the JHAC12s ability to assess the construct of active coping among African Americans and white Americans.


Journal of Black Psychology | 2008

Sociocultural Stress, Smoking Risk, and Cessation Among African American Women:

Anita Fernander; Mitzi Schumacher; Aashir Nasim

The common explanation as to why individuals smoke is that the act of smoking relieves psychological stress, yet very few studies have examined the association between stress and smoking from a sociocultural perspective among African American women. The current study examined the paradigm of sociocultural stress and its association between smoking risk and likelihood of quitting among African American women. One hundred ninety-eight African American women, approximately half of whom were current smokers, completed a battery of questionnaires that included a smoking risk survey and measures of acculturation, stress, and coping. A theoretically based path analytic model revealed that the acculturative stress factors of cultural mistrust (β = .39) and socialization (β = .17) were predictive of perceptions of race-related stress (R 2 = .18), which were predictive of the number of race-related events experienced (R 2 = .51), which contributed to reports of general life stress (R 2 = .07), which was subsequently associated with smoking risk (R 2 = .03). The findings suggest that smoking cessation intervention programs for African American women should be tailored to address sociocultural issues related to stress that impacts their smoking.


American Journal of Health Promotion | 2011

Cigarette Smoking Interventions among Diverse Populations

Anita Fernander; Ken Resnicow; Kasisomayajula Viswanath; Eliseo J. Pérez-Stable

One of the greatest public health success stories of the past 50 years has been the reduction in cigarette smoking in the United States. Smoking prevalence has decreased by 50% or more in the United States since the 1960s, and although recent reports indicate a plateau in this decline, the long-term downward trend has resulted in an overall smoking prevalence rate of 20.6% in 2009.1 Despite this success, the Healthy People 2010 objective of reducing the prevalence of cigarette smoking among adults to 12% or less has not been realized. This is, in large part, due to the fact that tobacco control efforts have not impacted population subgroups equally. In general, racial/ethnic minority groups and persons of lower socioeconomic status (SES) have not benefited as much as whites and those of higher SES from smoking prevention and cessation programs. If we are to meet the goal of 12% or less smoking prevalence among the overall adult population, more effort is needed to influence tobacco use behaviors among racial/ethnic and low SES populations


Journal of The National Medical Association | 2008

Smoking Risk and the Likelihood of Quitting among African-American Female Light and Heavy Smokers

Anita Fernander; Mitzi Schumacher; Xiaochen Wei; Peter A. Crooks; Peter J. Wedlund

While African-American females are more likely to be light smokers compared to their counterparts of other racially classified social groups (RCSGs), they are more likely to carry a heavier burden of smoking-related morbidity and mortality. Thus, it is critical that African-American female light smokers are targeted to engage in smoking cessation. Research has revealed that African-American women are less likely to have a successful quit attempt following a cessation intervention than females from other RCSGs. It has been postulated that the low smoking cessation rates among African-American female light smokers may be due to the lack of appropriate psychosocioculturally tailored cessation interventions that address issues of stress and coping that explain why they smoke and continue to smoke that may differ from their heavy smoker counterparts. The purpose of this study was to ascertain whether African-American female light smokers differed from their heavy smoker counterparts on psychosociocultural stress and coping factors. Findings revealed no differences in the sociodemographic variables of age, income, education and BMI; in the psychosociocultural measures of acculturative stress, race-related stress and coping; or in the smoking characteristics of menthol smoking status, cotinine level and CYP2A6 metabolic functioning between light and heavy smokers. However, the study found that African-American female light smokers take longer to smoke their first cigarette of the day, have a lower smoking risk, are more likely to quit, and exhibit lower carbon monoxide levels than African-American female heavy smokers. The current study suggests that other than the obvious factors of greater likelihood of quitting, lower smoking risk, longer latency to smoke and lower carbon monoxide levels, specific smoking cessation programs may not need to be differentially psychosocio-culturally tailored for African-American female light smokers compared to their heavy-smoking counterparts.


Journal of Ethnicity in Substance Abuse | 2011

Cultural Protective Factors for Community Risks and Substance Use Among Rural African American Adolescents

Aashir Nasim; Anita Fernander; Tiffany G. Townsend; Rosalie Corona; Faye Z. Belgrave

Relatively little attention has been afforded to protective factors for community-level risks among non-urban populations. This study examined the extent to which traditional cultural attitudes and behaviors of 137 African American adolescents (ages 12–17) from a rural community moderated the relationship between perceived community disorganization and substance use behaviors. Results from hierarchical linear regression revealed that traditional cultural attitudes and behaviors were differentially related to community disorganization and adolescent substance use. In terms of protective influences, religious beliefs and practices and traditional family practices moderated the effect of community disorganization on substance use. Specifically, religious beliefs and practices demonstrated a protective-stabilizing effect as community disorganization increased; traditional family practices demonstrated a protective but reactive effect. Attitudes of cultural mistrust increased youths susceptibility to substance use as community disorganization worsened—vulnerable and reactive. The findings underscore the importance of examining the link between cultural and contextual factors in an attempt to understand the etiology of substance use among rural African American adolescents.


Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica | 2010

Race‐related stress and smoking among pregnant African‐American women

Anita Fernander; George Moorman; Miriam Azuoru

Objectives. To examine the association between the psychosocial construct of race‐related stress and smoking among pregnant African‐American women. Design. Inferential statistical analyses were performed. Setting. Participants were recruited primarily at a medical clinic as well as through word‐of‐mouth consistent with the snowball sampling technique. Population. Seventy pregnant self‐identified African‐American women (32 smokers and 38 non‐smokers) 18 years or older participated in the study. Methods. Participants completed self‐report measures of the Index of Race‐Related Stress and an investigator‐developed demographic and smoking questionnaire. Main outcome measures. Smoking status of each participant was established through self‐report. Results. Significant associations were found between the smoking status of pregnant African‐American women and the frequency and perceptions of overall race‐related stress (p < 0.03 and 0.02, respectively), the frequency and perceptions of both individual and cultural race‐related stress (p < 0.01, 0.03, 0.05, and 0.03, respectively). No associations were found between institutional race‐related stress and smoking status. Conclusions. The findings suggest that integrating race‐related stress relieving and coping activities into smoking cessation intervention programs for pregnant African‐American women may reduce smoking and subsequent smoking‐related reproductive health disparities in the population.


Journal of Addictions Nursing | 2013

Racially classified social group differences in cigarette smoking, nicotine dependence, and readiness to quit.

Mary Kay Rayens; Ellen J. Hahn; Anita Fernander; Chizimuzo T.C. Okoli

AbstractThe purpose was to determine racially classified social group differences in smoking, nicotine dependence, and readiness to quit between African American and Caucasian smokers. The cross-sectional study included 53 African American and 839 Caucasian smokers participating in a larger population-based cessation intervention study. Data were analyzed from the interview conducted before the intervention; half of the participants were in the treatment group, recruited from those who had joined a cessation contest, whereas control group participants were recruited using random-digit dialing and were not in the contest. African Americans began smoking later, smoked fewer cigarettes daily, reported lower nicotine dependence, and had greater readiness to quit smoking than Caucasians. Of those who had ever used an evidence-based method, African American smokers were more likely to only use evidence-based quit methods, whereas Caucasian smokers were more likely to mix evidence-based with “cold turkey.” Controlling for demographics and treatment group, racially classified social group was a predictor of readiness to quit smoking. Later, age of initiation, positive partner support, and using evidence-based quit methods also predicted greater readiness to quit.

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Gary King

Pennsylvania State University

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Pebbles Fagan

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Eric T. Moolchan

National Institute on Drug Abuse

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Aashir Nasim

Virginia State University

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