Carol O. Cummins
University of Rhode Island
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Featured researches published by Carol O. Cummins.
Journal of Health Psychology | 2003
Carol O. Cummins; James O. Prochaska; Mary-Margaret Driskell; Kerry E. Evers; Julie A. Wright; Janice M. Prochaska; Wayne F. Velicer
A growing number of major health care organizations, such as the American Heart Association and the Mayo Clinic, are investing considerable resources in developing and marketing Internet-based programs for health promotion and disease management. These programs have the potential to provide some of the best-tailored interventions in behavior change science at relatively low costs. This report discusses review criteria developed in order to conduct a systematic evaluation of Internet programs for preventive behaviors (alcohol, diet, exercise and smoking) and disease management (pediatric asthma, depression and diabetes.) These criteria can be used to develop and evaluate the quality of health promotion programs on the Internet.
Addictive Behaviors | 2012
Kerry E. Evers; Andrea L. Paiva; Janet L. Johnson; Carol O. Cummins; James O. Prochaska; Janice M. Prochaska; Julie A. Padula; N. Simay Gökbayrak
BACKGROUND Early use of alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs threatens the physical and mental well-being of students and continued use negatively affects many areas of development. An internet-based, tailored intervention based on the Transtheoretical Model of Behavior Change was delivered to middle school students to reduce alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use. This internet-based approach requires very little faculty and staff time, which is efficient given curricular demands. METHODS Twenty-two middle schools in the United States were matched and randomly assigned to either the intervention or control conditions (N=1590 students who had ever used substances). Participants received one pre-test assessment, three thirty-minute intervention sessions over three months, and two post-test assessments (3 and 14 months after pre-test, respectively). RESULTS Random effects logistic models showed significant treatment effects for the intervention group when compared to the control group at the 3-month post-test. CONCLUSIONS This program has the potential to be applied as stand-alone practice or as part of more intensive interventions to promote substance use cessation.
American Journal of Health Promotion | 2009
Sara S. Johnson; Carol O. Cummins; Kerry E. Evers; Janice M. Prochaska; James O. Prochaska
Consumerism in health care has taken on the form of a major innovation among employers and health plans. Yet many of our efforts to enhance the skills and attitudes that enable consumerism have met with limited success. Proactive Health Consumerism is proposed as an approach that utilizes many of the hard-won lessons from health promotion research. Along with prerequisites that create the motivation and framework for increased health consumerism, this article provides a theory-driven example of a new tool for health promotion professionals to employ when enhancing the health consumer skills of working populations. Strategies for maximization of effectiveness and integration with supporting resources are also described.
Preventive Medicine | 2008
Sara S. Johnson; Andrea L. Paiva; Carol O. Cummins; Janet L. Johnson; Sharon Dyment; Julie A. Wright; James O. Prochaska; Janice M. Prochaska; Karen Sherman
Journal of Health Psychology | 2003
Kerry E. Evers; Janice M. Prochaska; James O. Prochaska; Mary-Margaret Driskell; Carol O. Cummins; Wayne F. Velicer
Journal of Medical Internet Research | 2005
Kerry E. Evers; Carol O. Cummins; James O. Prochaska; Janice M. Prochaska
Addictive Behaviors | 2006
Janet L. Johnson; Kerry E. Evers; Andrea L. Paiva; Deborah F. Van Marter; James O. Prochaska; Janice M. Prochaska; Leanne M. Mauriello; Carol O. Cummins; Julie A. Padula
Health Services Research | 2006
Deborah A. Levesque; Carol O. Cummins; Janice M. Prochaska; James O. Prochaska
Health Care Financing Review | 2001
Deborah A. Levesque; James O. Prochaska; Carol O. Cummins; Sherry A. Terrell; David J. Miranda
Managed care interface | 2004
Carol O. Cummins; Kerry E. Evers; Janet L. Johnson; Andrea L. Paiva; James O. Prochaska; Janice M. Prochaska