Colmar Figueroa-Moseley
University of Rochester
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Publication
Featured researches published by Colmar Figueroa-Moseley.
Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences | 2006
Colmar Figueroa-Moseley; Craig T. Ramey; Bette Keltner; Robin Gaines Lanzi
This research examines variations in parenting and its effects on child cognitive outcomes across Latino subgroups from a national sampling that utilized a subset of 995 former Head Start Latino parents and children. Comparisons of the Parenting Dimension Inventory scaled scores revealed Latino subgroup differences on nurturance and consistency. Puerto Rican parental caregivers scored higher on nurturance and consistency than Mexican Americans and El Salvadorans. Pearson’s product-moment correlation revealed a positive relationship between responsiveness to child inputs and higher academic achievement scores for each Latino subgroup. Examination of the Woodcock-Johnson Test of Achievement also revealed a main effect of Latino subgroup differences. Findings suggest that there exist intracultural variations in parenting and academic achievement within the Latino population and confirm previous findings that parenting is related to positive child cognitive outcomes.
Translational behavioral medicine | 2011
Jennifer K. Carroll; Antronette K Yancey; Bonnie Spring; Colmar Figueroa-Moseley; David C. Mohr; Karen M. Mustian; Lisa K. Sprod; Jason Q. Purnell; Kevin Fiscella
The purposes of this review are to (1) describe recruitment and retention strategies for physical activity interventions focusing on underserved populations and (2) identify successful strategies which show the most promise for “best practices” recommendations to guide future research. The method used was systematic review. Data on recruitment and retention strategies were abstracted and analyzed according to participant characteristics, types of strategies used, and effectiveness using an ecological framework. Thirty-eight studies were identified. Populations included African American (n = 25), Hispanic (n = 8), or Asian (n = 3) groups. Successful recruitment strategies consisted of partnering with respected community stakeholders and organizations, well-trained study staff ethnically, linguistically, and culturally matched to the population of interest, and use of multiple advertising channels. Successful retention strategies included efficient administrative tracking of participants, persistence, skillful teamwork, and demonstrating a positive, caring attitude towards participants. Promising recruitment and retention strategies correspond to all levels of ecological influence: individual, interpersonal, organizational, and societal.
British Journal of Cancer | 2007
Julie L. Ryan; Christopher Bole; Jane T. Hickok; Colmar Figueroa-Moseley; Lauren K. Colman; R C Khanna; Alice P. Pentland; Gary R. Morrow
Cancer patients may experience skin problems while undergoing chemotherapy and radiation therapy. Frequency of skin reactions may be influenced by skin pigmentation and psychological factors. A Symptom Inventory completed by 656 cancer patients nationwide before and after chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or chemotherapy plus radiation therapy was analysed to determine if treatment type, race (Black vs White), and pretreatment expectations influenced post-treatment skin reactions. Subsequent analysis of a local Symptom Inventory completed weekly for 5 weeks by 308 patients receiving radiation therapy examined severity of reported skin reactions. Significantly more patients receiving radiation therapy had stronger expectations of skin problems (62%) than patients receiving chemotherapy (40%, P=0.001) or chemotherapy plus radiation therapy (45%, P=0.003). Overall, expectations did not correlate with patient reported post-treatment skin problems in white (r=0.014, P=0.781) or black (r=0.021, P=0.936) patients. Although no significant difference was found between black and white patients in their pretreatment expectations of skin problems (P=0.32), black patients (10 out of 18, 56%) reported more skin problems than white patients (90 out of 393, 23%, P=0.001). Similarly, the local study showed that significantly more black patients (1 out of 5, 20%) reported severe skin reactions at the treatment site than white patients (12 out of 161, 8%). A direct correlation was observed between severity of skin problems and pain at the treatment site (r=0.541, P<0.001). Total radiation exposure did not significantly correlate with the report of skin problems at the treatment site for white or black patients. Overall, black patients reported more severe post-treatment skin problems than white patients. Our results suggest that symptom management for post-treatment skin reactions in cancer patients receiving radiation treatment could differ depending on their racial background.
Archive | 2008
Gary R. Morrow; Joseph A. Roscoe; Maralyn E. Kaufman; Christopher Bole; Colmar Figueroa-Moseley; Maarten Hofman; Karen M. Mustian
Cancer-related fatigue (CRF) is widely recognized as the most distressing adverse effect experienced by cancer patients. We report on a large prospective survey conducted in part to characterize CRF severity in relation to depression and shortness of breath and to compare symptom severity in radiation and chemotherapy patients and over time. Careful characterization of CRF will aid in the development of effective methods to manage this disabling symptom.
Oncologist | 2007
Maarten Hofman; Julie L. Ryan; Colmar Figueroa-Moseley; Pascal Jean-Pierre; Gary R. Morrow
Oncologist | 2007
Karen M. Mustian; Gary R. Morrow; Jennifer K. Carroll; Colmar Figueroa-Moseley; Pascal Jean-Pierre; Geoffrey C. Williams
Oncologist | 2007
Pascal Jean-Pierre; Colmar Figueroa-Moseley; Sadhna Kohli; Kevin Fiscella; Oxana Palesh; Gary R. Morrow
Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2010
Jason Q. Purnell; Mira L. Katz; Barbara L. Andersen; Oxana Palesh; Colmar Figueroa-Moseley; Pascal Jean-Pierre; Nancy M. Bennett
Journal of The National Comprehensive Cancer Network | 2007
Colmar Figueroa-Moseley; Pascal Jean-Pierre; Joseph A. Roscoe; Julie L. Ryan; Sadhna Kohli; Oxana Palesh; Elizabeth P. Ryan; Jennifer K. Carroll; Gary R. Morrow
Journal of The National Medical Association | 2010
Pascal Jean-Pierre; Kevin Fiscella; Jennifer J. Griggs; Jean V. Joseph; Gary R. Morrow; Jennifer K. Carroll; Samantha Hendren; Jason Q. Purnell; Colmar Figueroa-Moseley; Philip Kuebler; Tarit K. Banerjee; Jeffrey J. Kirshner