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Dive into the research topics where J. T. Ptacek is active.

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Featured researches published by J. T. Ptacek.


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 1994

Gender Differences in Coping with Stress: When Stressor and Appraisals Do Not Differ

J. T. Ptacek; Ronald E. Smith; Kenneth L. Dodge

In an attempt to control for the effects of event type on sex differences in coping, men and women responded to an identical achievement-related stressor under controlled laboratory conditions. Although men and women were similar in their cognitive appraisal of the situation, they nonetheless reported differences in preparatory coping. Women reported seeking social support and using emotion-focused coping to a greater extent than men, whereas men reported using relatively more problem-focused coping than women. The masculinity and femininity of respondents failed to moderate the relation between sex and coping. These results are inconsistent with a purely situational explanation of sex differences in coping but are consistent with the notion that men and women are socialized to cope with stress in different ways.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1990

Conjunctive moderator variables in vulnerability and resiliency research: life stress, social support and coping skills, and adolescent sport injuries

Ronald E. Smith; Frank L. Smoll; J. T. Ptacek

In life event research relating to vulnerability and resilience factors, single moderator variables have typically been the focus of study. Little is known about the ways in which moderator variables may interact with one another to increase vulnerability or resilience. We propose a distinction between conjunctive moderation, in which multiple moderators must co-occur in a specific combination or pattern to maximize a relation between a predictor and an outcome variable, and disjunctive moderation, in which any one of a number of moderators maximizes the predictor-criterion relation. Our results indicate that social support and psychological coping skills are statistically independent psychosocial resources and that they operate in a conjunctive manner to influence the relation between life stress and subsequent athletic injury in adolescents. Only athletes low in both coping skills and social support exhibited a significant stress-injury relation, and in that vulnerable subgroup, negative major life events accounted for up to 30% of the injury variance. Methodological considerations in the assessment of conjunctive moderator effects are discussed.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1999

Can people remember how they coped? Factors associated with discordance between same-day and retrospective reports

Ronald E. Smith; Thad R. Leffingwell; J. T. Ptacek

Using alternate forms derived from 6 scales from the Revised Ways of Coping Checklist (P. P. Vitaliano, 1993), the authors obtained daily coping scores from students as they prepared for a demanding test, then obtained a 7-day retrospective measure of their coping. On average, only 25% shared variance was found between the daily and retrospective accounts. A consistent pattern of retrospective overestimation of daily coping occurred, and large individual differences in degree of correspondence were observed. Among students who reported the highest level of exam-related stress, less than 10% of the retrospective coping score variance was predicted by the daily measures. The results indicate that retrospective coping reports cannot be considered equivalent to measures obtained in closer proximity to the event.


Journal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation | 2001

Rates, trends, and severity of depression after burn injuries

Shelley A. Wiechman; J. T. Ptacek; David R. Patterson; Nicole S. Gibran; L. E. Engrav; David M. Heimbach

It is commonly assumed that patients hospitalized for burn treatment will experience some level of depression. However, little is known about the trends in severity of depression over time. The purpose of this study was to determine the rates and severity of depression over a 2-year period. The Beck Depression Inventory was administered at 1 month (N = 151), 1 year (N = 130), and 2 years (N = 125) after discharge. At 1 month, 54% of patients showed symptoms of moderate to severe depression, and at 2 years, 43% of the patients responding still reported moderate to severe depression. The average correlation between scores over time was high. Women had higher depression scores than men at each time period. An interaction between gender and having a head or neck injury was also observed at 1 month and 1 year after discharge. Results suggest that routine outpatient screening for depression is warranted.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1997

Facilitating and debilitating trait anxiety, situational anxiety, and coping with an anticipated stressor : A process analysis

Brian D. Raffety; Ronald E. Smith; J. T. Ptacek

Participants completed anxiety and coping diaries during 10 periods that began 7 days before an academic stressor and continued through the evening after the stressor. Profile analysis was used to examine the anxiety and coping processes in relation to 2 trait anxiety grouping variables: debilitating and facilitating test anxiety (D-TA and F-TA). Anxiety and coping changed over time, and high and low levels of D-TA and F-TA were associated with different daily patterns of anxiety and coping. Participants with a debilitative, as opposed to facilitative, trait anxiety style had lower examination scores, higher anxiety, and less problem-solving coping. Covarying F-TA, high D-TA was associated with a pattern of higher levels of tension, worry, distraction, and avoidant coping, as well as lower levels of proactive coping. Covarying D-TA, high F-TA was associated with higher levels of tension (but not worry or distraction), support seeking, proactive and problem-solving coping.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1992

Sensation seeking, stress, and adolescent injuries: a test of stress-buffering, risk-taking, and coping skills hypotheses

Ronald E. Smith; J. T. Ptacek; Frank L. Smoll

The potential stress-buffering effects of sensation seeking were assessed in a prospective study involving high school athletes. A significant positive relation between major negative sport-specific life events and subsequent injury time-loss occurred only for athletes low in sensation seeking. No evidence was obtained for a competing hypothesis that high sensation seeking would constitute an injury vulnerability factor by increasing risk-taking behaviors. Although low sensation seekers reported poorer stress management coping skills, there was no evidence that differences in coping efficacy mediated the injury vulnerability difference. Results indicate that sensation seeking is a stress-resiliency factor and suggest the utility of assessing relations between life stressors and outcomes that occur within the same environmental context.


Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2001

“I'm Sorry To Tell You...” Physicians' Reports of Breaking Bad News

J. T. Ptacek; John J. Ptacek; Neil M. Ellison

In this investigation the authors assessed what physicians do when planning for and delivering bad news to patients. Seventy-three physicians responded to a series of statements about the behaviors, thoughts, and feelings they might have had while preparing for and delivering bad medically-related news. Data were also obtained about how well they thought the transaction had gone, how much stress they had experienced, and what they thought the experience was like from the patients perspective. Physicians reported that these transactions were only moderately stressful, with 18.1% and 18.7% indicating that preparation stress or delivery stress, respectively, were above the midpoint on the scale. Slightly over 42% of the sample indicated that the stress they experienced lasted from several hours to three or more days. Thirty-six delivery-related statements were typical (with endorsement rates of at least 80% in a given direction) for at least one of the two recall groups.


Journal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation | 2001

Time off work and return to work rates after burns: systematic review of the literature and a large two-center series

S. B. Brych; Loren H. Engrav; Frederick P. Rivara; J. T. Ptacek; D. C. Lezotte; Peter C. Esselman; Karen J. Kowalske; Nicole S. Gibran

The literature on time off work and return to work after burns is incomplete. This study addresses this and includes a systematic literature review and two-center series. The literature was searched from 1966 through October 2000. Two-center data were collected on 363 adults employed outside of the home at injury. Data on employment, general demographics, and burn demographics were collected. The literature search found only 10 manuscripts with objective data, with a mean time off work of 10 weeks and %TBSA as the most important predictor of time off work. The mean time off work for those who returned to work by 24 months was 17 weeks and correlated with %TBSA. The probability of returning to work was reduced by a psychiatric history and extremity burns and was inversely related to %TBSA. In the two-center study, 66% and 90% of survivors had returned to work at 6 and 24 months post-burn. However, in the University of Washington subset of the data, only 37% had returned to the same job with the same employer without accommodations at 24 months, indicating that job disruption is considerable. The impact of burns on work is significant.


Journal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation | 2000

The 2000 Clinical Research Award. Describing and predicting distress and satisfaction with life for burn survivors.

David R. Patterson; J. T. Ptacek; Fred Cromes; James A. Fauerbach; Loren H. Engrav

We investigated ratings of emotional distress and satisfaction with life at discharge from the hospital and at a 6-month follow-up in a multisite sample of 295 adults hospitalized for the care of a major burn injury. Several psychosocial variables (history of alcohol abuse, marital status, and previous mental health) and some medical variables (days of intensive care, pulmonary complications, and hand burns) accounted for significant variance in the prediction of outcomes. Brief Symptom Inventory (distress) scores were higher and Satisfaction With Life Scale scores were significantly lower than those of a normative population at both measurement points. The results show the utility of biosocial models in which psychological and physical variables interact to influence adjustment and quality of life.


Journal of Pain and Symptom Management | 1995

Pain, coping, and adjustment in patients with burns: Preliminary findings from a prospective study

J. T. Ptacek; David R. Patterson; Brenda Montgomery; David M. Heimbach

We prospectively examined the associations between procedural pain during hospitalization and coping and adjustment 1 month postdischarge in 43 patients treated at a major regional burn center for burns extensive enough to require at least 5 days of daily wound debridement procedures. Both patients and nurses provided ratings of patient pain, which were summarized and aggregated across a 5-day period. Results indicated that those subjects with higher pain scores also reported poorer adjustment as measured by scores on the Brief Symptoms Inventory and the Sickness Impact Profile. Moreover, these associations remained significant after partialling out the effects of preburn adjustment. Hierarchical regression analyses revealed evidence that seeking social support had a moderating effect on the association between pain and scores on a measure of posttraumatic stress disorder.

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Shari Honari

University of Washington

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John J. Ptacek

Mary Greeley Medical Center

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