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Dive into the research topics where C. Barr Taylor is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Barr Taylor.


Circulation | 2008

Depression and Coronary Heart Disease Recommendations for Screening, Referral, and Treatment: A Science Advisory From the American Heart Association Prevention Committee of the Council on Cardiovascular Nursing, Council on Clinical Cardiology, Council on Epidemiology and Prevention, and Interdisciplinary Council on Quality of Care and Outcomes Research: Endorsed by the American Psychiatric Association

Judith H. Lichtman; J. Thomas Bigger; James A. Blumenthal; Nancy Frasure-Smith; Peter G. Kaufmann; François Lespérance; Daniel B. Mark; David S. Sheps; C. Barr Taylor; Erika Sivarajan Froelicher

Depression is commonly present in patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) and is independently associated with increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Screening tests for depressive symptoms should be applied to identify patients who may require further assessment and treatment. This multispecialty consensus document reviews the evidence linking depression with CHD and provides recommendations for healthcare providers for the assessment, referral, and treatment of depression.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 1999

Naturalistic weight-reduction efforts prospectively predict growth in relative weight and onset of obesity among female adolescents.

Eric Stice; Rebecca P. Cameron; Joel D. Killen; Chris Hayward; C. Barr Taylor

This study examined the prospective relations of naturalistic weight-reduction efforts to growth in relative weight and onset of obesity with data from a community study of female adolescents (N = 692). Initial self-labeled dieting, appetite suppressant/laxative use, incidental exercise, vomiting for weight-control purposes, and binge eating predicted elevated growth in relative weight over the 4-year period. Dietary restraint, self-labeled dieting, exercise for weight-control purposes, and appetite suppressant/laxative use predicted an increased risk for obesity onset. Data imply that the weight-reduction efforts reported by adolescents are more likely to result in weight gain than in weight loss and suggest the need to educate youth on more effective weight-control strategies.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 1994

Pursuit of thinness and onset of eating disorder symptoms in a community sample of adolescent girls: A three-year prospective analysis.

Joel D. Killen; C. Barr Taylor; Chris Hayward; Darrell M. Wilson; K. Farish Haydel; Lawrence D. Hammer; Beverly Simmonds; Thomas N. Robinson; Iris F. Litt; Ann Varady; Helena C. Kraemer

Community-based prospective studies are needed to shed light on mechanisms that may influence development of eating disorders and identify variables that could serve as potential targets for prevention efforts. In this paper we examine level of weight preoccupation and other variables prospectively associated with age of onset of eating disorder symptoms over a 3-year interval in a community sample (N = 939) of young adolescent girls. 3.6% (32/887) experienced onset of symptoms over the interval. Only one factor, a measure of Weight Concerns, was significantly associated with onset (p < .001). Girls scoring in the highest quartile on the measure of Weight Concerns had the shortest survival time (12% incidence by age 14.5) and those scoring in the lowest quartile had the highest survival time (2% incidence by age 14.5; p < .001). This finding is consistent with both theoretical and clinical perspectives and represents one of the first prospective demonstrations of a linkage between weight and body shape concerns and later onset of eating disorder symptoms. An understanding of the independent variables that predispose girls to development of symptoms is a useful step towards the establishment of a rational basis for the choice of a prevention intervention target.


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2000

Body-image and eating disturbances predict onset of depression among female adolescents: a longitudinal study.

Eric Stice; Chris Hayward; Rebecca P. Cameron; Joel D. Killen; C. Barr Taylor

This study examined data from a 4-year school-based longitudinal study (n = 1,124), to test whether the increase in major depression that occurs among girls during adolescence may be partially explained by the body-image and eating disturbances that emerge after puberty. Elevated body dissatisfaction, dietary restraint, and bulimic symptoms at study entry predicted onset of subsequent depression among initially nondepressed youth in bivariate analyses controlling for initial depressive symptoms. Although the unique effect for body dissatisfaction was not significant in the multivariate model, this set of risk factors was able to fairly accurately foretell which girls would go on to develop major depression. Results were consistent with the assertion that the body-image- and eating-related risk factors that emerge after puberty might contribute to the elevated rates of depression for adolescent girls.


Preventive Medicine | 1986

Predictors of adoption and maintenance of physical activity in a community sample

James F. Sallis; William L. Haskell; Stephen P. Fortmann; Karen Vranizan; C. Barr Taylor; Douglas S. Solomon

Predictors of changes in three measures of physical activity over 1 year were examined in a community sample of 1,411 California adults. Five percent of women and 11% of men adopted vigorous activities (e.g., running), and 26% of men and 34% of women adopted regular moderate activity (e.g., walking). About 50% of vigorous exercisers and 25-35% of moderate exercisers dropped out in 1 year. About 9% reported large 1-year increases in globally rated activity level, while about 7% reported decreases in global activity. In multivariate analyses, adoption of vigorous activity was predicted by young age, male gender, and self-efficacy. Maintenance of vigorous activity was predicted by attitudes toward physical activity. Adoption of moderate activity was predicted by health knowledge, and maintenance was predicted by specific exercise knowledge, female gender, and self-efficacy.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1990

Smoking Cessation after Acute Myocardial Infarction: Effects of a Nurse-Managed Intervention

C. Barr Taylor; Nancy Houston-Miller; Joel D. Killen; Robert F. DeBusk

STUDY OBJECTIVE To determine the effect of a nurse-managed intervention for smoking cessation in patients who have had a myocardial infarction. DESIGN Randomized, with a 6-month treatment period and a 6-month follow-up. SETTING Kaiser Foundation hospitals in Redwood City, Santa Clara, Hayward, and San Jose, California. PATIENTS Sequential sample of 173 patients, 70 years of age or younger, who were smoking before hospitalization for acute myocardial infarction. Eighty-six patients were randomly assigned to the intervention and 87 to usual care; 130 patients (75%) completed the study and were available for follow-up. INTERVENTION Nurse-managed and focused on preventing relapse to smoking, the intervention was initiated in the hospital and maintained thereafter primarily through telephone contact. Patients were given an 18-page manual that emphasized how to identify and cope with high-risk situations for smoking relapse. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS One year after myocardial infarction, the smoking cessation rate, verified biochemically, was 71% in the intervention group compared with 45% in the usual care group, a 26% difference (95% CI, 9.5% to 42.6%). Assuming that all surviving patients lost to follow-up were smoking, the 12-month smoking cessation rate was 61% in the intervention group compared with 32% in the usual care group, a 29% difference (95% CI, 14.5% to 43.5%). Patients who either resumed smoking within 3 weeks after infarction or expressed little intention of stopping in the hospital were unlikely to have stopped by 12 months. CONCLUSIONS A nurse-managed smoking cessation intervention largely conducted by telephone, initiated in the hospital, and focused on relapse prevention can significantly reduce smoking rates at 12 months in patients who have had a myocardial infarction.


Cancer | 2003

Evaluation of an internet support group for women with primary breast cancer

Andrew J. Winzelberg; Catherine Classen; Georg W. Alpers; Heidi Roberts; Cheryl Koopman; E B S Robert Adams; Heidemarie Ernst; Parvati Dev; C. Barr Taylor

Women with breast carcinoma commonly experience psychologic distress following their diagnosis. Women who participate in breast cancer support groups have reported significant reduction in their psychologic distress and pain and improvement in the quality of their lives. Web‐based breast cancer social support groups are widely used, but little is known of their effectiveness. Preliminary evidence suggests that women benefit from their participation in web‐based support groups.


Circulation | 2002

Secondary Prevention of Coronary Heart Disease in the Elderly (With Emphasis on Patients ≥75 Years of Age) An American Heart Association Scientific Statement From the Council on Clinical Cardiology Subcommittee on Exercise, Cardiac Rehabilitation, and Prevention

Mark A. Williams; Jerome L. Fleg; Philip A. Ades; Bernard R. Chaitman; Nancy Houston Miller; Syed M. Mohiuddin; Ira S. Ockene; C. Barr Taylor; Nanette K. Wenger

The overall aging of the American population and improving survival of patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) has created a large population of older adults (≥65 years of age) eligible for secondary prevention. The prevalence of chronic ischemic heart disease in men and women ≥65 years of age in the United States in 1995 was 83 per 1000 men and 90 per 1000 women. Among those ≥75 years of age, the prevalences were 217 per 1000 for men and 129 per 1000 for women.1 Increasing evidence has accumulated over the past 2 decades that elderly individuals with CHD can benefit greatly from exercise training and other aspects of secondary prevention.2 Traditionally, components of secondary prevention programming (including exercise; smoking cessation; management of dyslipidemia, hypertension, diabetes, and weight; and interventions directed at depression, social isolation, return to work, and other psychosocial issues) have been provided by the clinician in the office setting or through cardiac rehabilitation programs. Cardiac rehabilitation programs are particularly well suited to the provision of secondary prevention services, but unfortunately, many older patients who would derive benefit from these interventions do not participate because of lack of referral or a variety of societal and other barriers.3 It is the purpose of this Scientific Statement to provide an update on the benefits of specific secondary prevention risk factor interventions in this age group and, where possible, to delineate benefits in the older elderly (≥75 years of age). An increased awareness on the part of physicians, nurses, third-party payers, and patients and their families of the benefits of secondary prevention programs to older adults will provide a basis for referral and aid in the implementation of such programming. The clinical manifestations of CHD in older patients represent the effects of the disease superimposed on the physiological effects …


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 2000

Predictors of Panic Attacks in Adolescents

Chris Hayward; Joel D. Killen; Helena C. Kraemer; C. Barr Taylor

OBJECTIVE To identify risk factors for onset of panic attacks in adolescents, a prospective cohort design was used to evaluate the following risk factors: negative affectivity, female sex, anxiety sensitivity, and childhood separation anxiety disorder. These risk factors were also evaluated for predicting onset of major depression to test their specificity. METHOD The sample consisted of 2,365 high school students assessed over a 4-year period. Assessments included self-report questionnaires and structured clinical interviews. Cox proportional hazards models were used to evaluate risk. RESULTS Consistent with previous studies, prior major depression predicted onset of panic attacks and a history of panic attacks predicted onset of major depression. After adjusting for the effects of prior major depression, negative affectivity and anxiety sensitivity, but not female sex or childhood separation anxiety disorder, predicted onset of 4-symptom panic attacks. However, female sex and negative affectivity but not anxiety sensitivity or childhood separation anxiety disorder predicted onset of major depression after adjustment for the effects of prior panic attacks. CONCLUSION Negative affectivity appears to be a nonspecific risk factor for panic attacks and major depression, whereas anxiety sensitivity appears to be a specific factor that increases the risk for 4-symptom panic attacks in adolescents.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1987

Perceived self-efficacy and pain control: Opioid and nonopioid mechanisms.

Albert Bandura; Ann O'Leary; C. Barr Taylor; Janel Gauthier; Denis Gossard

In this experiment, we tested for opioid and nonopioid mechanisms of pain control through cognitive means and the relation of opioid involvement to perceived coping efficacy. Subjects were taught cognitive methods of pain control, were administered a placebo, or received no intervention. Their pain tolerance was then measured at periodic intervals after they were administered either a saline solution or naloxone, an opiate antagonist that blocks the effects of endogenous opiates. Training in cognitive control strengthened perceived self-efficacy both to withstand and to reduce pain; placebo medication enhanced perceived efficacy to withstand pain but not reductive efficacy; and neither form of perceived self-efficacy changed without any intervention. Regardless of condition, the stronger the perceived self-efficacy to withstand pain, the longer subjects endured mounting pain stimulation. The findings provide evidence that attenuation of the impact of pain stimulation through cognitive control is mediated by both opioid and nonopioid mechanisms. Cognitive copers administered naloxone were less able to tolerate pain stimulation than were their saline counterparts. The stronger the perceived self-efficacy to reduce pain, the greater was the opioid activation. Cognitive copers were also able to achieve some increase in pain tolerance even when opioid mechanisms were blocked by naloxone, which is in keeping with a nonopioid component in cognitive pain control. We found suggestive evidence that placebo medication may also activate some opioid involvement. Because placebos do not impart pain reduction skills, it was perceived self-efficacy to endure pain that predicted degree of opioid activation.

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Denise E. Wilfley

Washington University in St. Louis

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Michelle G. Newman

Pennsylvania State University

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