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Dive into the research topics where Barbara Jandasek is active.

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Featured researches published by Barbara Jandasek.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2004

Parent Functioning in Families of Preadolescents With Spina Bifida: Longitudinal Implications for Child Adjustment

Deborah Friedman; Grayson N. Holmbeck; Barbara Jandasek; Jill Zukerman; Mona Abad

The purpose of this study was to test a strength-of-association model regarding possible longitudinal and bidirectional associations between parent functioning and child adjustment in families of children with spina bifida (n = 68) and families of able-bodied children (n = 68). Parent functioning was assessed across 3 domains: parenting stress, individual psychosocial adjustment, and marital satisfaction. Child adjustment was indexed by teacher-reported internalizing and externalizing symptoms, self-reported depressive symptoms, and observed adaptive behavior. Findings revealed that all 3 parent functioning variables predicted child adjustment outcomes, and that such results were particularly strong for externalizing symptoms. Associations between parent functioning and child adjustment tended to be in the direction of parent to child and were similar across both groups. These findings have implications for potential interventions targeted at helping families manage the transition into early adolescence in families of children with spina bifida as well as families of healthy children.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2010

Trajectories of Psychosocial Adjustment in Adolescents with Spina Bifida: A 6-Year, Four-Wave Longitudinal Follow-up.

Grayson N. Holmbeck; Christian DeLucia; Bonnie S. Essner; Lauren M. Kelly; Kathy Zebracki; Deborah Friedman; Barbara Jandasek

OBJECTIVE As a follow-up to an earlier cross-sectional study (Holmbeck et al., 2003), the current multimethod, multi-informant investigation examined individual growth in psychosocial adjustment across the adolescent transition in 2 samples: young adolescents with spina bifida (SB) and typically developing adolescents (N = 68 in both groups at Time 1). METHOD Growth curve modeling procedures were used to describe the developmental course of psychosocial adjustment across 4 waves of data collection from ages 8 to 15. Child gender was included in the models as a moderator of associations between illness status and adjustment trajectories. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS Findings revealed that preadolescent differences between groups were maintained for several adjustment variables, indicating that adolescents with SB have enduring academic and attention problems and difficulties with social development (e.g., fewer friends and less influence during family interactions). For other outcomes, trajectories of adjustment levels for adolescents with SB converged on levels observed in comparison adolescents, indicating some areas of resilience. Girls with SB were at risk for increasing levels of social difficulties and negative perceptions of their physical appearance. Clinical implications are discussed.


Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2012

Identifying Individual, Cultural and Asthma-Related Risk and Protective Factors Associated With Resilient Asthma Outcomes in Urban Children and Families

Daphne Koinis-Mitchell; Elizabeth L. McQuaid; Barbara Jandasek; Sheryl J. Kopel; Ronald Seifer; Robert B. Klein; Christina Potter; Gregory K. Fritz

OBJECTIVE The goal of this study is to identify individual, family/cultural, and illness-related protective factors that may minimize asthma morbidity in the context of multiple urban risks in a sample of inner-city children and families. METHODS Participating families are from African-American (33), Latino (51) and non-Latino white (47) backgrounds. A total of 131 children with asthma (56% male), ages 6-13 years and their primary caregivers were included. RESULTS Analyses supported the relationship between cumulative risks and asthma morbidity across children of the sample. Protective processes functioned differently by ethnic group. For example, Latino families exhibited higher levels of family connectedness, and this was associated with lower levels of functional limitation due to asthma, in the context of risks. CONCLUSIONS This study demonstrates the utility of examining multilevel protective processes that may guard against urban risks factors to decrease morbidity. Intervention programs for families from specific ethnic groups can be tailored to consider individual, family-based/cultural and illness-related supports that decrease stress and enhance aspects of asthma treatment.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2009

Trajectories of family processes across the adolescent transition in youth with spina bifida.

Barbara Jandasek; Grayson N. Holmbeck; Christian DeLucia; Kathy Zebracki; Deborah Friedman

The current study investigated change in family processes, including conflict, cohesion, and stress, across the adolescent transition, comparing the developmental trajectories of youth with and without spina bifida. Individual growth curve modeling procedures were utilized to describe the developmental course of family processes across 4 waves of data collection, from ages 9 to 15 years, and to test whether illness status (spina bifida vs. matched comparison group [N = 68 for both groups at Time 1]) would significantly predict individual variability in family processes. Potential moderators (child gender, socioeconomic status [SES], and child verbal ability) of the association between illness status and family functioning were also examined. Differences were found between the trajectories of family processes for families of youth with and without spina bifida. For families of youth with spina bifida, changes in family conflict and cohesion may be less dramatic than or inconsistent with what is expected during typical adolescence. Families of youth with spina bifida from low SES homes appear to demonstrate resilience in terms of family stress.


Academic Pediatrics | 2014

Complementary and Alternative Medicine Use and Adherence to Asthma Medications Among Latino and Non-Latino White Families

Elizabeth L. McQuaid; David A. Fedele; Sue K. Adams; Daphne Koinis-Mitchell; Jessica Mitchell; Sheryl J. Kopel; Ronald Seifer; Barbara Jandasek; Gregory K. Fritz; Glorisa Canino

OBJECTIVE The current study sought to evaluate patterns of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) use in a sample of Latino and non-Latino white (NLW) children with asthma to determine whether parental beliefs about conventional medications and barriers to obtaining these medications were related to CAM use and to assess whether CAM use was associated with decreased adherence to controller medications. METHODS Participants included 574 families of children with asthma from NLW, Puerto Rican (PR), and Dominican backgrounds from Rhode Island (RI) and from Island PR. All parents completed a brief checklist of barriers to medication use and an assessment of CAM approaches. A subsample of 259 families had controller medication use monitored objectively for approximately 1 month by MDILog (fluticasone propionate), TrackCap (montelukast), or dosage counter (fluticasone/salmeterol combination). RESULTS Prevalence of CAM use was high among Latino families. Perceived barriers to obtaining medication were related to increased CAM use in PR families from RI. Elevated medication concerns were positively associated with CAM use among NLW and Island PR families. CAM use was positively related to objective adherence within NLW families, and unrelated in other groups. CONCLUSIONS CAM use is common among Latino families with asthma. Among some families, CAM use may be initiated as a way to cope with barriers to obtaining medication or when parents have concerns about conventional medications. Families who report CAM use do not appear to be substituting CAM for conventional asthma medication.


Medical Care Research and Review | 2011

Access to and Use of Asthma Health Services Among Latino Children: The Rhode Island-Puerto Rico Asthma Center Study

Barbara Jandasek; Alexander N. Ortega; Elizabeth L. McQuaid; Daphne Koinis-Mitchell; Gregory K. Fritz; Sheryl J. Kopel; Ronald Seifer; Robert B. Klein; Glorisa Canino

This study determines asthma-related health care access and utilization patterns for Latino children of Puerto Rican and Dominican origin residing in Rhode Island (RI) and Latino children residing in Puerto Rico (Island). Data included 804 families of children with persistent asthma recruited from clinics. Island children were less likely to receive regular asthma care and care from a consistent provider and more likely to have been to the emergency department and hospitalized for asthma than RI children. Island children were 2.33 times more likely to have used the emergency department for asthma compared with RI non-Latino White (NLW) children. Latino children residing in both Island and RI were less likely to have used specialty care and more likely to have had a physician visit for asthma in the past year than RI NLW children. The differences might reflect the effects of the different delivery systems on pediatric health care utilization and asthma management.


Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2010

A Camp-based Intervention Targeting Independence Among Individuals with Spina Bifida

Kerry O'mahar; Grayson N. Holmbeck; Barbara Jandasek; Jill Zukerman

OBJECTIVE To design and evaluate a camp-based intervention, the goal of which was to increase independence among children, adolescents, and adults with spina bifida. METHODS An intervention targeting independence was embedded within a typical week long camp experience. The intervention consisted of the following: collaborative (i.e., parent and camper) goal identification, group sessions consisting of psycho-education and cognitive tools, and goal monitoring by camp counselors. Camper and parent report of demographic variables, goal attainment, spina bifida knowledge, and independence were gathered. Interventionist report of adherence to the treatment manual was also collected. RESULTS Campers made significant gains in individual goals, management of spina bifida responsibilities, and independence with general spina bifida tasks, with medium effect sizes observed in goal attainment. CONCLUSIONS Results indicated that significant progress was made on individually oriented goals from pre- to post-camp. Design issues are discussed.


Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2016

Topical Review: Pediatric Food Allergies Among Diverse Children

Elizabeth L. McQuaid; Michael L. Farrow; Cynthia A. Esteban; Barbara Jandasek; Susan A. Rudders

OBJECTIVE To present a brief review of the literature regarding potential racial/ethnic disparities in pediatric food allergy (FA). METHODS Topical review considering data regarding FA prevalence, asthma comorbidity, epinephrine access/use, and psychosocial impact (e.g., burden, quality of life). RESULTS Methodological variation precludes firm conclusions regarding disparities in prevalence; however, some data suggest Black children may be at particular risk. The comorbidity of FA and asthma among urban populations may increase risk of negative outcomes. There are clear racial/ethnic and socioeconomic disparities in epinephrine access and use. Psychosocial measures are frequently validated on samples that are not racially or ethnically diverse. Studies investigating FAs psychosocial impact are often composed of mostly White, non-Hispanic participants (>85% of study sample). CONCLUSIONS Further research is needed to clarify prevalence patterns by race/ethnicity, to investigate the sources of disparity in epinephrine use, and to evaluate the differential impact of FA on diverse children.


allergy rhinol (providence) | 2013

Perceptual accuracy of upper airway compromise in children: Clinical relevance and future directions for research

Daphne Koinis-Mitchell; Cynthia A. Esteban; Sheryl J. Kopel; Barbara Jandasek; Katie Dansereau; Gregory K. Fritz; Robert B. Klein

Approximately 80% of children with asthma have coexisting allergic rhinitis. The accurate recognition and assessment of asthma and rhinitis symptoms is an integral component of guideline-based treatment for both conditions. This article describes the development and preliminary evaluation of a novel paradigm for testing the accuracy of childrens assessment of their upper airway (rhinitis) symptoms. This work is guided by our previous research showing the clinical efficacy of tools to evaluate childrens perceptual accuracy of asthma symptoms and linking accurate asthma symptom perception to decreased asthma morbidity (Fritz G, et al., Ethnic differences in perception of lung function: A factor in pediatric asthma disparities? Am J Respir Crit Care Med 182:12–18, 2010; Klein RB, et al., The Asthma Risk Grid: Clinical interpretation of symptom perception, Allergy Asthma Proc 251–256, 2004). The pilot study tests a paradigm that allows for the examination of the correspondence of childrens assessment of their upper airway functioning with actual values of upper airway flow through the use of a portable, handheld nasal peak flowmeter. Nine children with persistent asthma were evaluated over a 4-week period. The article describes the rhinitis perceptual accuracy paradigm and reviews the results of a pilot study, showing a large proportion of inaccurate rhinitis symptoms “guesses” by the sample of children with persistent asthma. Patterns of inaccuracy, rhinitis control, and asthma morbidity are also described. Directions for future work are reviewed. The development of clinical tools to evaluate childrens accuracy of rhinitis symptoms are needed, given the central role of the self-assessment of symptoms in guideline-based care. Accurate perception of the severity of rhinitis symptoms may enhance rhinitis control, lessen the burden of asthma, and prevent unnecessary emergency use among this high-risk group of children.


Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology | 2016

Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Plus Healthy Lifestyle Enhancement for Depressed, Overweight/Obese Adolescents: Results of a Pilot Trial.

Elissa Jelalian; Barbara Jandasek; Jennifer C. Wolff; Lourah M. Seaboyer; Richard N. Jones; Anthony Spirito

The objective of this article was to conduct a treatment development study to examine the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of treating depressed, overweight/obese adolescents using both an exercise regimen and a Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) protocol modified to address aspects of healthy living and nutrition (CBT plus healthy lifestyle; CBT-HL). A randomized controlled repeated measures design was used to test the hypothesis that CBT-HL would lead to greater reductions in depressed mood and weight compared to CBT for Depression Only (CBT). Participants (n=33; 24 in CBT-HL condition) included 33 adolescents (median age 15, 73% female, 61% white, 36% Hispanic) who met DSM-IV criteria for Current Major Depressive Episode (MDE) and had BMI ≥ 85th percentile. CBT-HL was found to be feasible to implement with most adolescents. Both conditions resulted in improvement in depressed mood. The CBT-HL protocol was more effective in stabilizing weight status as assessed by BMI. Percent time spent in MVPA was increased at 12 weeks for adolescents in CBT-HL compared to those in CBT. The CBT-HL protocol was acceptable to most, but not all, adolescents, and resulted in an improvement in depressed mood as well as stabilization of weight status. A larger study to test efficacy and moderators of treatment outcome is necessary to better understand which adolescents would benefit most from the increased demands of exercise and adhering to nutrition recommendations in addition to standard CBT for depression. Revisions to the treatment protocol to support weight loss, not just stabilization, are also suggested.

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Jill Zukerman

Loyola University Chicago

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